<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>A SLAVE IS A SLAVE</h1>
<h2>BY H. BEAM PIPER</h2>
<div class="bbox">
<h4>Transcriber's Note</h4>
<p>This etext was produced from Analog Science Fact—Science Fiction
April 1962. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the
U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.</p>
</div>
<div class="center"><div class="figcenter" style="margin-top: 2em; background-image:url(images/illus-001.png);
width:500px; height:394px;">
<p style="font-size: larger; padding-left: 5em; padding-right: 7em; padding-top: 5em; text-align: right;">There has always been</p>
<p style="font-size: larger; padding-left: 5em; padding-right: 5em;">strong sympathy for the poor,</p>
<p style="font-size: larger; padding-left: 5em; padding-right: 7em; text-align: right;">meek, downtrodden slave—</p>
<p style="font-size: larger; padding-left: 5em; padding-right: 7em; text-align: right;">the kindly little man, oppressed</p>
<p style="font-size: larger; padding-left: 5em; padding-right: 5em;">by cruel and overbearing masters.</p>
<p style="font-size: larger; padding-left: 5em; padding-right: 5em; text-align: right;">Could it possibly have been misplaced...?</p>
</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Jurgen, Prince Trevannion, accepted
the coffee cup and lifted it to
his lips, then lowered it. These Navy
robots always poured coffee too hot;
spacemen must have collapsium-lined
throats. With the other hand, he
punched a button on the robot's keyboard
and received a lighted cigarette;
turning, he placed the cup on
the command-desk in front of him
and looked about. The tension was relaxing
in Battle-Control, the purposeful
pandemonium of the last three
hours dying rapidly. Officers of both
sexes, in red and blue and yellow and
green coveralls, were rising from
seats, leaving their stations, gathering
in groups. Laughter, a trifle loud; he
realized, suddenly, that they had been
worried, and wondered if he should
not have been a little so himself. No.
There would have been nothing he
could have done about anything, so
worry would not have been useful.
He lifted the cup again and sipped
cautiously.</p>
<p>"That's everything we can do now,"
the man beside him said. "Now we
just sit and wait for the next move."</p>
<p>Like all the others, Line-Commodore
Vann Shatrak wore shipboard
battle-dress; his coveralls were black,
splashed on breast and between shoulders
with the gold insignia of his
rank. His head was completely bald,
and almost spherical; a beaklike nose
carried down the curve of his brow,
and the straight lines of mouth and
chin chopped under it enhanced
rather than spoiled the effect. He was
getting coffee; he gulped it at once.</p>
<p>"It was very smart work, Commodore.
I never saw a landing operation
go so smoothly."</p>
<p>"Too smooth," Shatrak said. "I don't
trust it." He looked suspiciously up
at the row of viewscreens.</p>
<p>"It was absolutely unnecessary!"</p>
<p>That was young Obray, Count Erskyll,
seated on the commodore's left.
He was a generation younger than
Prince Trevannion, as Shatrak was a
generation older; they were both
smooth-faced. It was odd, how beards
went in and out of fashion with alternate
generations. He had been worried,
too, during the landing, but for
a different reason from the others.
Now he was reacting with anger.</p>
<p>"I told you, from the first, that it
was unnecessary. You see? They
weren't even able to defend themselves,
let alone...."</p>
<p>His personal communication-screen
buzzed; he set down the coffee
and flicked the switch. It was Lanze
Degbrend. On the books, Lanze was
carried as Assistant to the Ministerial
Secretary. In practice, Lanze was his
chess-opponent, conversational foil,
right hand, third eye and ear, and,
sometimes, trigger-finger. Lanze was
now wearing the combat coveralls of
an officer of Navy Landing-Troops;
he had a steel helmet with a transpex
visor shoved up, and there was a carbine
slung over his shoulder. He
grinned and executed an exaggeratedly
military salute. He chuckled.</p>
<p>"Well, look at you; aren't you the
perfect picture of correct diplomatic
dress?"</p>
<p>"You know, sir, I'm afraid I am, for
this planet," Degbrend said. "Colonel<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64"></SPAN></span>
Ravney insisted on it. He says the
situation downstairs is still fluid,
which I take to mean that everybody
is shooting at everybody. He says he
has the main telecast station, in the
big building the locals call the Citadel."</p>
<p>"Oh, good. Get our announcement
out as quickly as you can. Number
Five. You and Colonel Ravney can
decide what interpolations are needed
to fit the situation."</p>
<p>"Number Five; the really tough
one," Degbrend considered. "I take it
that by interpolations you do not mean
dilutions?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no; don't water the drink.
Spike it."</p>
<p>Lanze Degbrend grinned at him.
Then he snapped down the visor of
his helmet, unslung his carbine, and
presented it. He was still standing at
present arms when Trevannion
blanked the screen.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>"That still doesn't excuse a wanton
and unprovoked aggression!" Erskyll
was telling Shatrak, his thin face
flushed and his voice quivering with
indignation. "We came here to help
these people, not to murder them."</p>
<p>"We didn't come here to do either,
Obray," he said, turning to face the
younger man. "We came here to annex
their planet to the Galactic Empire,
whether they wish it annexed
or not. Commodore Shatrak used the
quickest and most effective method of
doing that. It would have done no
good to attempt to parley with them
from off-planet. You heard those telecasts
of theirs."</p>
<p>"Authoritarian," Shatrak said, then
mimicked pompously: "'Everybody is
commanded to remain calm; the Mastership
is taking action. The Convocation
of the Lords-Master is in special
session; they will decide how to
deal with the invaders. The administrators
are directed to reassure the
supervisors; the overseers will keep
the workers at their tasks. Any person
disobeying the orders of the Mastership
will be dealt with most severely.'"</p>
<p>"Static, too. No spaceships into this
system for the last five hundred years;
the Convocation—equals Parliament,
I assume—hasn't been in special session
for two hundred and fifty."</p>
<p>"Yes. I've taken over planets with
that kind of government before,"
Shatrak said. "You can't argue with
them. You just grab them by the center
of authority, quick and hard."</p>
<p>Count Erskyll said nothing for a
moment. He was opposed to the use
of force. Force, he believed, was the
last resort of incompetence; he had
said so frequently enough since this
operation had begun. Of course, he
was absolutely right, though not in the
way he meant. Only the incompetent
wait until the last extremity to use
force, and by then, it is usually too late
to use anything, even prayer.</p>
<p>But, at the same time, he was opposed
to authoritarianism, except, of
course, when necessary for the real
good of the people. And he did not
like rulers who called themselves
Lords-Master. Good democratic rulers
called themselves Servants of the
People. So he relapsed into silence<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65"></SPAN></span>
and stared at the viewscreens.</p>
<p>One, from an outside pickup on the
<i>Empress Eulalie</i> herself, showed the
surface of the planet, a hundred miles
down, the continent under them curving
away to a distant sun-reflecting
sea; beyond the curved horizon, the
black sky was spangled with unwinking
stars. Fifty miles down, the sun
glinted from the three thousand foot
globes of the two transport-cruisers,
<i>Canopus</i> and <i>Mizar</i>.</p>
<p>Another screen, from <i>Mizar</i>, gave a
clearer if more circumscribed view of
the surface—green countryside,
veined by rivers and wrinkled with
mountains; little towns that were
mere dots; a scatter of white clouds.
Nothing that looked like roads. There
had been no native sapient race on
this planet, and in the thirteen centuries
since it had been colonized the
<ins class="corr" title="Hyphenated, as in majority usage in text.">Terro-human</ins> population had never
completely lost the use of contragravity
vehicles. In that screen, farther
down, the four destroyers, <i>Irma</i>, <i>Irene</i>,
<i>Isobel</i> and <i>Iris</i>, were tiny twinkles.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>From <i>Irene</i>, they had a magnified
view of the city. On the maps, none
later than eight hundred years old, it
was called Zeggensburg; it had been
built at the time of the first colonization
under the old Terran Federation.
Tall buildings, rising from wide interspaces
of lawns and parks and gardens,
and, at the very center, widely
separated from anything else, the
mass of the Citadel, a huge cylindrical
tower rising from a cluster of
smaller cylinders, with a broad circular
landing stage above, topped by the
newly raised flag of the Galactic
Empire.</p>
<p>There was a second city, a thick
crescent, to the south and east. The
old maps placed the Zeggensburg
spaceport there, but not a trace of that
remained. In its place was what was
evidently an industrial district, located
where the prevailing winds would
carry away the dust and smoke. There
was quite a bit of both, but the surprising
thing was the streets, long
curved ones, and shorter ones crossing
at regular intervals to form
blocks. He had never seen a city with
streets before, and he doubted if anybody
else on the Empire ships had.
Long boulevards to give unobstructed
passage to low-level air-traffic, of
course, and short winding walkways,
but not things like these. Pictures, of
course, of native cities on planets colonized
at the time of the Federation,
and even very ancient ones of cities
on pre-Atomic Terra. But these people
had contragravity; the towering,
wide-spaced city beside this cross-gridded
anachronism proved that.</p>
<p>They knew so little about this
planet which they had come to bring
under Imperial rule. It had been colonized
thirteen centuries ago, during
the last burst of expansion before the
System States War and the disintegration
of the Terran Federation, and
it had been named Aditya, in the fashion
of the times, for some forgotten
deity of some obscure and ancient
polytheism. A century or so later, it
had seceded from or been abandoned
by the Federation, then breaking up.
That much they had gleaned from old<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66"></SPAN></span>
Federation records still existing on
Baldur. After that, darkness, lighted
only by a brief flicker when more
records had turned up on Morglay.</p>
<p>Morglay was one of the Sword-Worlds,
settled by refugee rebels from
the System States planets. Mostly they
had been soldiers and spacemen;
there had been many women with
them, and many were skilled technicians,
engineers, scientists. They had
managed to carry off considerable
equipment with them, and for three
centuries they had lived in isolation,
spreading over a dozen hitherto undiscovered
planets. Excalibur, Tizona,
Gram, Morglay, Durendal, Flamberge,
Curtana, Quernbiter; the
names were a roll-call of fabulous
blades of Old Terran legend.</p>
<p>Then they had erupted, suddenly
and calamitously, into what was left of
the Terran Federation as the Space
Vikings, carrying pillage and destruction,
until the newborn Empire rose
to vanquish them. In the sixth Century
Pre-Empire, one of their fleets
had come from Morglay to Aditya.</p>
<p>The Adityans of that time had been
near-barbarians; the descendants of
the original settlers had been serfs of
other barbarians who had come as
mercenaries in the service of one or
another of the local chieftains and had
remained to loot and rule. Subjugating
them had been easy; the Space
Vikings had taken Aditya and made it
their home. For several centuries,
there had been communication between
them and their home planet.
Then Morglay had become involved
in one of the interplanetary dynastic
wars that had begun the decadence
of the Space Vikings, and again
Aditya dropped out of history.</p>
<p>Until this morning, when history
returned in the black ships of the
Galactic Empire.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>He stubbed out the cigarette and
summoned the robot to give him another.
Shatrak was speaking:</p>
<p>"You see, Count Erskyll, we really
had to do it this way, for their own
good." He wouldn't have credited the
commodore with such guile; anything
was justified, according to Obray of
Erskyll, if done for somebody else's
good. "What we did, we just landed
suddenly, knocked out their army,
seized the center of government, before
anybody could do anything. If
we'd landed the way you'd wanted us
to, somebody would have resisted, and
the next thing, we'd have had to kill
about five or six thousand of them and
blow down a couple of towns, and
we'd have lost a lot of our own people
doing it. You might say, we had to do
it to save them from themselves."</p>
<p>Obray of Erskyll seemed to have
doubts, but before he could articulate
them, Shatrak's communication-screen
was calling attention to itself.
The commodore flicked the switch,
and his executive officer, Captain
Patrique Morvill, appeared in it.</p>
<p>"We've just gotten reports, sir,
that some of Ravney's people have
captured a half-dozen missile-launching
sites around the city. His air-reconn
tells him that that's the lot of
them. I have an officer of one of the
parties that participated. You ought<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67"></SPAN></span>
to hear what he has to say, sir."</p>
<p>"Well, good!" Vann Shatrak
whooshed out his breath. "I don't
mind admitting, I was a little on edge
about that."</p>
<p>"Wait till you hear what Lieutenant
Carmath has to say." Morvill seemed
to be strangling a laugh. "Ready for
him, Commodore?"</p>
<p>Shatrak nodded; Morvill made a
hand-signal and vanished in a flicker
of rainbow colors; when the screen
cleared, a young Landing-Troop lieutenant
in battle-dress was looking out
of it. He saluted and gave his name,
rank and unit.</p>
<p>"This missile-launching site I'm
occupying, sir; it's twenty miles
north-west of the city. We took it
thirty minutes ago; no resistance
whatever. There are four hundred or
so people here. Of them, twelve, one
dozen, are soldiers. The rest are civilians.
Ten enlisted men, a non-com
of some sort, and something that appears
to be an officer. The officer had
a pistol, fully loaded. The non-com
had a submachine gun, empty, with
two loaded clips on his belt. The privates
had rifles, empty, and no ammunition.
The officer did not know
where the rifle ammunition was
stored."</p>
<p>Shatrak swore. The second lieutenant
nodded. "Exactly my comment
when he told me, sir. But this place
is beautifully kept up. Lawns all
mowed, trees neatly pruned, everything
policed up like inspection
morning. And there is a headquarters
office building here adequate for an
army division...."</p>
<p>"How about the armament, Lieutenant?"
Shatrak asked with forced
patience.</p>
<p>"Ah, yes; the armament, sir. There
are eight big launching cradles for
panplanetary or off-planet missiles.
They are all polished up like the
Crown Jewels. But none, repeat none,
of them is operative. And there is not
a single missile on the installation."</p>
<p>Shatrak's facial control didn't slip.
It merely intensified, which amounted
to the same thing.</p>
<p>"Lieutenant Carmath, I am morally
certain I heard you correctly, but let's
just check. You said...."</p>
<p>He repeated the lieutenant back,
almost word for word. Carmath nodded.</p>
<p>"That was it, sir. The missile-crypts
are stacked full of old photoprints
and recording and microfilm
spools. The sighting-and-guidance
systems for all the launchers are completely
missing. The letoff mechanisms
all lack major parts. There is an
elaborate set of detection equipment,
which will detect absolutely nothing.
I saw a few pairs of binoculars about;
I suspect that that is what we were
first observed with."</p>
<p>"This office, now; I suppose all the
paperwork is up to the minute in
quintulplicate, and initialed by everybody
within sight or hearing?"</p>
<p>"I haven't checked on that yet, sir.
If you're thinking of betting on it,
please don't expect me to cover you,
though."</p>
<p>"Well, thank you, Lieutenant Carmath.
Stick around; I'm sending
down a tech-intelligence crew to look<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68"></SPAN></span>
at what's left of the place. While
you're waiting, you might sort out
whoever seems to be in charge and
find out just what in Nifflheim he
thinks that launching-station was
maintained for."</p>
<div class="center"><div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-007.png" width-obs="500" height-obs="431" alt="" title="" /> </div>
</div>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>"I think I can tell you that, now,
Commodore," Prince Trevannion
said as Shatrak blanked the screen.
"We have a petrified authoritarianism.
Quite likely some sort of an oligarchy;
I'd guess that this Convocation
thing they talk about consists of all
the ruling class, everybody has equal
voice, and nobody will take the responsibility
for doing anything. And
the actual work of government is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69"></SPAN></span>
probably handled by a corps of bureaucrats
entrenched in their jobs,
unwilling to exert any effort and
afraid to invite any criticism, and
living only to retire on their pensions.
I've seen governments like
that before." He named a few. "One
thing; once a government like that
has been bludgeoned into the Empire,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70"></SPAN></span>
it rarely makes any trouble later."</p>
<div class="center"><div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-008.png" width-obs="500" height-obs="705" alt="" title="" /> </div>
</div>
<p>"Just to judge by this missileless
non-launching station," Shatrak said,
"they couldn't even decide on what
kind of trouble to make, or how to
start it. I think you're going to have a
nice easy Proconsulate here, Count
Erskyll."</p>
<p>Count Erskyll started to say something.
No doubt he was about to tell
Shatrak, cuttingly, that he didn't want
an easy Proconsulate, but an opportunity
to help these people. He was
saved from this by the buzzing of
Shatrak's communication-screen.</p>
<p>It was Colonel Pyairr Ravney, the
Navy Landing-Troop commander.
Like everybody else who had gone
down to Zeggensburg, he was in battle-dress
and armed; the transpex
visor of his helmet was pushed up.
Between Shatrak's generation and
Count Erskyll's, he sported a pointed
mustache and a spiky chin-beard,
which, on his thin and dark-eyed face,
looked distinctly Mephistophelean.
He was grinning.</p>
<p>"Well, sir, I think we can call it a
done job," he said. "There's a delegation
here who want to talk to the
Lords-Master of the ships on behalf
of the Lords-Master of the Convocation.
Two of them, with about a dozen
portfolio-bearers and note-takers.
I'm not too good in Lingua Terra,
outside Basic, at best, and their brand
is far from that. I gather that they're
some kind of civil-servants, personal
representatives of the top Lords-Master."</p>
<p>"Do we want to talk to them?"
Shatrak asked.</p>
<p>"Well, we should only talk to the
actual, titular, heads of the government—Mastership,"
Erskyll, suddenly
protocol-conscious, objected. "We
can't negotiate with subordinates."</p>
<p>"Oh, who's talking about negotiating;
there isn't anything to negotiate.
Aditya is now a part of the Galactic
Empire. If this present regime
assents to that, they can stay in power.
If not, we will toss them out and
install a new government. We will
receive this delegation, inform them
to that effect, and send them back to
relay the information to their Lords-Master."
He turned to the Commodore.
"May I speak to Colonel Ravney?"</p>
<p>Shatrak assented. He asked Ravney
where these Lords-Master were.</p>
<p>"Here in the Citadel, in what they
call the Convocation Chamber. Close
to a thousand of them, screaming recriminations
at one another. Sounds
like feeding time at the Imperial Zoo.
I think they all want to surrender, but
nobody dares propose it first. I've just
put a cordon around it and placed it
off limits to everybody. And everything
outside off limits to the Convocation."</p>
<p>"Well thought of, Colonel. I suppose
the Citadel teems with bureaucrats
and such low life-forms?"</p>
<p>"Bulging with them. Literally thousands.
Lanze Degbrend and Commander
Douvrin and a few others are
trying to get some sensible answers
out of some of them."</p>
<p>"This delegation; how had you
thought of sending them up?"</p>
<p>"Landing-craft to <i>Isobel</i>; <i>Isobel</i><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71"></SPAN></span>
will bring them the rest of the way."</p>
<p>He looked at his watch. "Well,
don't be in too much of a rush to get
them here, Colonel. We don't want
them till after lunch. Delay them on
<i>Isobel</i>; the skipper can see that they
have their own lunch aboard. And entertain
them with some educational
films. Something to convince them
that there is slightly more to the Empire
than one ship-of-the-line, two
cruisers and four destroyers."</p>
<p>Count Erskyll was dissatisfied about
that, too. He wanted to see the delegation
at once and make arrangements
to talk to their superiors. Count
Erskyll, among other things, was zealous,
and of this he disapproved. Zealous
statesmen perhaps did more mischief
than anything in the Galaxy—with
the possible exception of procrastinating
soldiers. That could indicate
the fundamental difference between
statecraft and war. He'd have
to play with that idea a little.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>An Empire ship-of-the-line was almost
a mile in diameter. It was more
than a battle-craft; it also had political
functions. The grand salon, on the
outer zone where the curvature of the
floors was less disconcerting, was as
magnificent as any but a few of the
rooms of the Imperial Palace at Asgard
on Odin, the floor richly carpeted
and the walls alternating mirrors
and paintings. The movable furniture
varied according to occasion; at
<ins class="corr" title="Original reads 'present;'">present,</ins> it consisted of the bare desk
at which they sat, the three chairs
they occupied, and the three secretary-robots,
their rectangular black
casts blazened with the Sun and
Cogwheel of the Empire. It faced the
door, at the far end of the room;
on either side, a rank of spacemen, in
dress uniform and under arms, stood.</p>
<p>In principle, annexing a planet to
the Empire was simplicity itself, but
like so many things simple in principle,
it was apt to be complicated in
practice, and to this, he suspected, the
present instance would be no exception.</p>
<p>In principle, one simply informed
the planetary government that it was
now subject to the sovereignty of his
Imperial Majesty, the Galactic Emperor.
This information was always
conveyed by a Ministerial Secretary,
directly under the Prime Minister
and only one more step down from
the Emperor, in the present instance
Jurgen, Prince Trevannion. To make
sure that the announcement carried
conviction, the presumedly glad tidings
were accompanied by the Imperial
Space Navy, at present represented
by Commodore Vann Shatrak
and a seven ship battle-line unit, and
two thousand Imperial Landing-Troops.</p>
<p>When the locals had been properly
convinced—with as little bloodshed
as necessary, but always beyond any
dispute—an Imperial Proconsul, in
this case Obray, Count Erskyll, would
be installed. He would by no means
govern the planet. The Imperial Constitution
was definite on that point;
every planetary government should
be sovereign as to intraplanetary affairs.
The Proconsul, within certain
narrow and entirely inelastic limits,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72"></SPAN></span>
would merely govern the government.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, Obray, Count Erskyll,
appeared not to understand this
completely. It was his impression that
he was a torch-bearer of Imperial civilization,
or something equally picturesque
and metaphorical. As he conceived
it, it was the duty of the Empire,
as represented by himself, to
make over backward planets like
Aditya in the image of Odin or Marduk
or Osiris or Baldur or, preferably,
his own home world of Aton.</p>
<p>This was Obray of Erskyll's first
proconsular appointment, it was due
to family influence, and it was a mistake.
Mistakes, of course, were inevitable
in anything as large and complex
as the Galactic Empire, and any
institution guided by men was subject
to one kind of influence or another,
family influence being no
worse than any other kind. In this
case, the ultra-conservative Erskylls of
Aton, from old Errol, Duke of Yorvoy,
down, had become alarmed at the
political radicalism of young Obray,
and had, on his graduation from the
University of Nefertiti, persuaded the
Prime Minister to appoint him to a
Proconsulate as far from Aton as possible,
where he would not embarrass
them. Just at that time, more important
matters having been gotten out
of the way, Aditya had come up for
annexation, and Obray of Erskyll had
been named Proconsul.</p>
<p>That had been the mistake. He
should have been sent to some planet
which had been under Imperial rule
for some time, where the Proconsulate
ran itself in a well-worn groove,
and where he could at leisure learn
the procedures and unlearn some of
the unrealisms absorbed at the University
from professors too well insulated
from the realities of politics.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>There was a stir among the guards;
helmet-visors were being snapped
down; feet scuffed. They stiffened to
attention, the great doors at the other
end of the grand salon slid open, and
the guards presented arms as the
Adityan delegation was ushered in.</p>
<p>There were fourteen of them. They
all wore ankle-length gowns, and they
all had shaven heads. The one in the
lead carried a staff and wore a pale
green gown; he was apparently a
herald. Behind him came two in white
gowns, their empty hands folded on
their breasts; one was a huge bulk of
obesity with a bulging brow, protuberant
eyes and a pursey little
mouth, and the other was thin and
cadaverous, with a skull-like, almost
fleshless face. The ones behind, in
dark green and pale blue, carried
portfolios and slung sound-recorder
cases. There was a metallic twinkle at
each throat; as they approached, he
could see that they all wore large silver
gorgets. They came to a halt
twenty feet from the desk. The herald
raised his staff.</p>
<p>"I present the Admirable and
Trusty Tchall Hozhet, personal chief-slave
of the Lord-Master Olvir Nikkolon,
Chairman of the Presidium of
the Lords-Master's Convocation, and
Khreggor Chmidd, chief-slave in office
to the Lord-Master Rovard Javasan,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73"></SPAN></span>
Chief of Administration of Management
of the Mastership," he said.
Then he stopped, puzzled, looking
from one to another of them. When
his eyes fell on Vann Shatrak, he
brightened.</p>
<p>"Are you," he asked, "the chief-slave
of the chief Lord-Master of this
ship?"</p>
<p>Shatrak's face turned pink; the
pink darkened to red. He used a
word; it was a completely unprintable
word. So, except for a few scattered
pronouns, conjunctions and
prepositions, were the next fifty
words he used. The herald stiffened.
The two delegates behind him were
aghast. The subordinate burden-bearers
in the rear began looking
around apprehensively.</p>
<p>"I," Shatrak finally managed, "am
an officer of his Imperial Majesty's
Space Navy. I am in command of
this battle-line unit. I am <i>not</i>"—he
reverted briefly to obscenity—"a
slave."</p>
<p>"You mean, you are a Lord-Master,
too?" That seemed to horrify the
herald even more that the things
Shatrak had been calling him. "Forgive
me, Lord-Master. I did not think...."</p>
<p>"That's right; you didn't," Shatrak
agreed. "And don't call me Lord-Master
again, or I'll...."</p>
<p>"Just a moment, Commodore." He
waved the herald aside and addressed
the two in white gowns, shifting to
Lingua Terra. "This is a ship of the
Galactic Empire," he told them. "In
the Empire, there are no slaves. Can
you understand that?"</p>
<p>Evidently not. The huge one,
Khreggor Chmidd, turned to the
skull-faced Tchall Hozhet, saying:
"Then they must all be Lords-Master."
He saw the objection to that at
once. "But how can one be a Lord-Master
if there are no slaves?"</p>
<p>The horror was not all on the visitors'
side of the desk, either. Obray of
Erskyll was staring at the delegation
and saying, "Slaves!" under his
breath. Obray of Erskyll had never, in
his not-too-long life, seen a slave before.</p>
<p>"They can't be," Tchall Hozhet replied.
"A Lord-Master is one who
owns slaves." He gave that a moment's
consideration. "But if they
aren't Lords-Master, they must be
slaves, and...." No. That wouldn't
do, either. "But a slave is one who belongs
to a Lord-Master."</p>
<p>Rule of the Excluded Third; evidently
Pre-Atomic formal logic had
crept back to Aditya. Chmidd, looking
around, saw the ranks of spacemen
on either side, now at parade-rest.</p>
<p>"But aren't they slaves?" he asked.</p>
<p>"They are spacemen of the Imperial
Navy," Shatrak roared. "Call one
a slave to his face and you'll get a
rifle-butt in yours. And I shan't lift a
finger to stop it." He glared at
Chmidd and Hozhet. "Who had the
infernal impudence to send slaves to
deal with the Empire? He needs to
be taught a lesson."</p>
<p>"Why, I was sent by the Lord-Master
Olvir Nikkolon, and...."</p>
<p>"Tchall!" Chmidd hissed at him.
"We cannot speak to Lords-Master.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74"></SPAN></span>
We must speak to their chief-slaves."</p>
<p>"But they have no slaves," Hozhet
objected. "Didn't you hear the ...
the one with the small beard ...
say so?"</p>
<p>"But that's ridiculous, Khreggor.
Who does the work, and who tells
them what to do? Who told these
people to come here?"</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>"Our Emperor sent us. That is his
picture, behind me. But we are not
his slaves. He is merely the chief man
among us. Do your Masters not have
one among them who is chief?"</p>
<p>"That's right," Chmidd said to
Hozhet. "In the Convocation, your
Lord-Master is chief, and in the Mastership,
my Lord-Master, Rovard Javasan,
is chief."</p>
<p>"But they don't tell the other
Lords-Master what to do. In Convocation,
the other Lords-Master tell
them...."</p>
<p>"That's what I meant about an
oligarchy," he whispered, in Imperial,
to Erskyll.</p>
<p>"Suppose we tell Ravney to herd
these Lords-Master onto a couple of
landing-craft and bring them up
here?" Shatrak suggested. He made
the suggestion in Lingua Terra Basic,
and loudly.</p>
<p>"I think we can manage without
that." He raised his voice, speaking
in Lingua Terra Basic:</p>
<p>"It does not matter whether these
slaves talk to us or not. This planet
is now under the rule of his Imperial
Majesty, Rodrik III. If this Mastership
wants to govern the planet under
the Emperor, they may do so. If
not, we will make an end of them
and set up a new government here."</p>
<p>He paused. Chmidd and Hozhet
were looking at one another in
shocked incredulity.</p>
<p>"Tchall, they mean it," Chmidd
said. "They can do it, too."</p>
<p>"We have nothing more to say to
you slaves," he continued. "Hereafter,
we will speak directly to the Lords-Master."</p>
<p>"But.... The Lords-Master never
do business directly," Hozhet said.
"It is un-Masterly. Such discussions
are between chief-slaves."</p>
<p>"This thing they call the Convocation,"
Shatrak mentioned. "I wonder
if the members have the business
done entirely through their slaves."</p>
<p>"Oh, no!" That shocked Chmidd
into direct address. "No slave is allowed
in the Convocation Chamber."</p>
<p>He wondered how they kept the
place swept out. Robots, no doubt. Or
else, what happened when the Masters
weren't there didn't count.</p>
<p>"Very well. Your people have recorders;
are they on?"</p>
<p>Hozhet asked Chmidd; Chmidd
asked the herald, who asked one of
the menials in the rear, who asked
somebody else. The reply came back
through the same channels; they were.</p>
<p>"Very well. At this time tomorrow,
we will speak to the Convocation of
Lords-Master. Commodore Shatrak,
see to it that Colonel Ravney has
them in the Convocation Chamber,
and that preparations in the room
are made, so that we may address
them in the dignity befitting representatives
of his Imperial Majesty."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75"></SPAN></span>
He turned to the Adityan slaves.
"That is all. You have permission to
go."</p>
<p>They watched the delegation back
out, with the honor-guard following.
When the doors had closed behind
them, Shatrak ran his hand over his
bald head and laughed.</p>
<p>"Shaved heads, every one of them.
That's probably why they thought I
was your slave. Bet those gorgets are
servile badges, too." He touched the
Knight's Star of the Order of the
Empire at <ins class="corr" title="Original reads 'this'">his</ins> throat. "Probably
thought that was what this was. We
would have to draw something like
this!"</p>
<p>"They simply can't imagine anybody
not being either a slave or a
slave-owner," Erskyll was saying.
"That must mean that there is no
free non-slave-holding class at all.
Universal slavery! Well, we'll have to
do something about that. Proclaim total
emancipation, immediately."</p>
<p>"Oh, no; we can't do anything like
that. The Constitution won't permit
us to. Section Two, Article One: <i>Every
Empire planet shall be self-governed
as to its own affairs, in the
manner of its own choice, and without
interference.</i>"</p>
<p>"But slavery.... Section Two,
Article Six," Erskyll objected. "<i>There
shall be no chattel slavery or serfdom
anywhere in the Empire; no sapient
being of any race whatsoever shall
be the property of any being but
himself.</i>"</p>
<p>"That's correct," he agreed. "If this
Mastership intends to remain the
planetary government under the Empire,
they will be obliged to abolish
slavery, but they will have to do it by
their own act. We cannot do it for
them."</p>
<p>"You know what I'd do, Prince
Trevannion?" Shatrak said. "I'd just
heave this Mastership thing out, and
set up a nice tight military dictatorship.
We have the planet under martial
rule now; let's just keep it that
way for about five years, till we can
train a new government."</p>
<p>That suggestion seemed to pain
Count Erskyll almost as much as the
existing situation.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>They dined late, in Commodore
Shatrak's private dining room. Beside
Shatrak, Erskyll and himself,
there were Lanze Degbrend, and
Count Erskyll's charge-d'affaires,
Sharll Ernanday, and Patrique Morvill
and Pyairr Ravney and the naval
intelligence officer, Commander Andrey
Douvrin. Ordinarily, he deplored
serious discussion at meals,
but under the circumstances it was
unavoidable; nobody could think or
talk of anything else. The discussion
which he had hoped would follow the
meal began before the soup-course.</p>
<p>"We have a total population of
about twenty million," Lanze Degbrend
reported. "A trifle over ten
thousand Masters, all ages and both
sexes. The remainder are all slaves."</p>
<p>"I find that incredible," Erskyll declared
promptly. "Twenty million
people, held in slavery by ten thousand!
Why do they stand for it?
Why don't they rebel?"</p>
<p>"Well, I can think of three good<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76"></SPAN></span>
reasons," Douvrin said. "Three square
meals a day."</p>
<div class="center"><div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-015.png" width-obs="500" height-obs="306" alt="" title="" /> </div>
</div>
<p>"And no responsibilities; no need
to make decisions," Degbrend added.
"They've been slaves for seven and a
half centuries. They don't even know
the meaning of freedom, and it
would frighten them if they did."</p>
<p>"Chain of command," Shatrak said.
When that seemed not to convey any
meaning to Erskyll, he elaborated:
"We have a lot of dirty-necked working
slaves. Over every dozen of them
is an overseer with a big whip and a
stungun. Over every couple of overseers
there is a guard with a submachine
gun. Over them is a supervisor,
who doesn't need a gun because he
can grab a handphone and call for
troops. Over the supervisors, there are
higher supervisors. Everybody has it
just enough better than the level below
him that he's afraid of losing his
job and being busted back to fieldhand."</p>
<p>"That's it exactly, Commodore,"
Degbrend said. "The whole society
is a slave hierarchy. Everybody curries
favor with the echelon above, and
keeps his eye on the echelon below
to make sure he isn't being undercut.
We have something not too unlike
that, ourselves. Any organizational society
is, in some ways, like a slave
society. And everything is determined
by established routine. The whole
thing has simply been running on
momentum for at least five centuries,
and if we hadn't come smashing in
with a situation none of the routines
covered, it would have kept on running
for another five, till everything<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></SPAN></span>
wore out and stopped. I heard about
those missile-stations, by the way.
They're typical of everything here."</p>
<p>"That's another thing," Erskyll interrupted.
"These Lords-Master are
the descendants of the old Space-Vikings,
and the slaves of the original
inhabitants. The Space Vikings were
a technologically advanced people;
they had all the old Terran Federation
science and technology, and a lot they
developed for themselves on the
Sword-Worlds."</p>
<p>"Well? They still had a lot of it, on
the Sword-Worlds, two centuries ago
when we took them over."</p>
<p>"But technology always drives out
slavery; that's a fundamental law of
socio-economics. Slavery is economically
unsound; it cannot compete with
power-industry, let alone cybernetics
and robotics."</p>
<p>He was tempted to remind young
Obray of Erskyll that there were no
such things as fundamental laws of
socio-economics; merely usually reliable
generalized statements of what
can more or less be depended upon to
happen under most circumstances. He
resisted the temptation. Count Erskyll
had had enough shocks, today,
without adding to them by gratuitous
blasphemy.</p>
<p>"In this case, Obray, it worked in
reverse. The Space Vikings enslaved
the Adityans to hold them in subjugation.
That was a politico-military necessity.
Then, being committed to
slavery, with a slave population who
had to be made to earn their keep,
they found cybernetics and robotics
economically unsound."</p>
<p>"And almost at once, they began
appointing slave overseers, and the
technicians would begin training
slave assistants. Then there would be
slave supervisors to direct the overseers,
slave administrators to direct
them, slave secretaries and bookkeepers,
slave technicians and engineers."</p>
<p>"How about the professions,
Lanze?"</p>
<p>"All slave. Slave physicians, teachers,
everything like that. All the Masters
are taught by slaves; the slaves
are educated by apprenticeship. The
courts are in the hands of slaves;
cases are heard by the chief slaves of
judges who don't even know where
their own courtrooms are; every Master
has a team of slave lawyers. Most
of the lawsuits are estate-inheritance
cases; some of them have been in
litigation for generations."</p>
<p>"What do the Lords-Master do?"
Shatrak asked.</p>
<p>"Masterly things," Degbrend replied.
"I was only down there since
noon, but from what I could find
out, that consists of feasting, making
love to each other's wives, being entertained
by slave performers, and
feuding for social precedence like
wealthy old ladies on Odin."</p>
<p>"You got this from the slaves?
How did you get them to talk,
Lanze?"</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Degbrend and Ravney exchanged
amused glances. Ravney said:</p>
<p>"Well, I detailed a sergeant and
six privates to accompany Honorable
Degbrend," Ravney said. "They....
How would you put it, Lanze?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I asked a slave a question. If he
refused to answer, somebody knocked
him down with a rifle-butt," Degbrend
replied. "I never had to do
that more than once in any group,
and I only had to do it three times in
all. After that, when I asked questions,
I was answered promptly and
fully. It is surprising how rapidly
news gets around the Citadel."</p>
<p>"You mean you had those poor
slaves beaten?" Erskyll demanded.</p>
<p>"Oh, no. Beating implies repeated
blows. We only gave one to a customer;
that was enough."</p>
<p>"Well, how about the army, if
that's what those people in the long
red-brown coats were?" Shatrak
changed the subject by asking Ravney.</p>
<p>"All slave, of course, officers and
all. What will we do about them,
sir? I have about three thousand, either
confined to their barracks or
penned up in the Citadel. I requisitioned
food for them, paid for it in
chits. There were a few isolated companies
and platoons that gave us
something of a fight; most of them
just threw away their weapons and
bawled for quarter. I've segregated
the former; with your approval, I'll
put them under Imperial officers and
noncoms for a quickie training in
our tactics, and then use them to train
the rest."</p>
<p>"Do that, Pyairr. We only have
two thousand men of our own, and
that's not enough. Do you think you
can make soldiers out of any of
them?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I believe so, sir. They are
trained, organized and armed for civil-order
work, which is what we'll
need them for ourselves. In the entire
history of this army, all they
have done has been to overawe unarmed
slaves; I am sure they have
never been in combat with regular
troops. They have an elaborate set of
training and field regulations for the
sort of work for which they were intended.
What they encountered today
was entirely outside those regulations,
which is why they behaved
as they did."</p>
<p>"Did you have any trouble getting
cooperation from the native officers?"
Shatrak asked.</p>
<p>"Not in the least. They cooperated
quite willingly, if not always too
intelligently. I simply told them that
they were now the personal property
of his Imperial Majesty, Rodrik III.
They were quite flattered by the
change of ownership. If ordered to, I
believe that they would fire on their
former Lords-Master without hesitation."</p>
<p>"You told those slaves that they
... <i>belonged</i> ... to the <i>Emperor</i>?"</p>
<p>Count Erskyll was aghast. He
stared at Ravney for an instant, then
snatched up his brandy-glass—the
meal had gotten to that point—and
drained it at a gulp. The others
watched solicitously while he coughed
and spluttered over it.</p>
<p>"Commodore Shatrak," he said
sternly. "I hope that you will take severe
disciplinary action; this is the
most outrageous...."</p>
<p>"I'll do nothing of the sort," Shatrak<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></SPAN></span>
retorted. "The colonel is to be
commended; did the best thing he
could, under the circumstances. What
are you going to do when slavery is
abolished here, Colonel?"</p>
<p>"Oh, tell them that they have been
given their freedom as a special reward
for meritorious service, and
then sign them up for a five year enlistment."</p>
<p>"That might work. Again, it might
not."</p>
<p>"I think, Colonel, that before you
do that, you had better disarm them
again. You might possibly have some
trouble, otherwise."</p>
<p>Ravney looked at him sharply.
"They might not want to be free?
I'd thought of that."</p>
<p>"Nonsense!" Erskyll declared.
"Who ever heard of slaves rebelling
against freedom?"</p>
<p>Freedom was a Good Thing. It
was a Good Thing for everybody,
everywhere and all the time. Count
Erskyll knew it, because freedom was
a Good Thing for him.</p>
<p>He thought, suddenly, of an old
tomcat belonging to a lady of his acquaintance
at Paris-on-Baldur, a most
affectionate cat, who insisted on
catching mice and bringing them as
presents to all his human friends. To
this cat's mind, it was inconceivable
that anybody would not be most happy
to receive a nice fresh-killed
mouse.</p>
<p>"Too bad we have to set any of
them free," Vann Shatrak said. "Too
bad we can't just issue everybody new
servile gorgets marked, <i>Personal Property
of his Imperial Majesty</i> and let
it go at that. But I guess we can't."</p>
<p>"Commodore Shatrak, you are joking,"
Erskyll began.</p>
<p>"I hope I am," Shatrak replied
grimly.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>The top landing-stage of the Citadel
grew and filled the forward viewscreen
of the ship's launch. It was
only when he realized that the tiny
specks were people, and the larger,
birdseed-sized, specks vehicles, that
the real size of the thing was apparent.
Obray of Erskyll, beside him,
had been silent. He had been looking
at the crescent-shaped industrial
city, like a servile gorget around
Zeggensburg's neck.</p>
<p>"The way they've been crowded together!"
he said. "And the buildings;
no space between. And all that
smoke! They must be using fossil-fuel!"</p>
<p>"It's probably too hard to process
fissionables in large quantities, with
what they have."</p>
<p>"You were right, last evening.
These people have deliberately halted
progress, even retrogressed, rather
than give up slavery."</p>
<p>Halting progress, to say nothing of
retrogression, was an unthinkable
crime to him. Like freedom, progress
was a Good Thing, anywhere, at all
times, and without regard to direction.</p>
<p>Colonel Ravney met them when
they left the launch. The top landing-stage
was swarming with Imperial
troops.</p>
<p>"Convocation Chamber's three
stages down," he said. "About two<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></SPAN></span>
thousand of them there now; been
coming in all morning. We have everything
set up." He laughed. "They
tell me slaves are never permitted to
enter it. Maybe, but they have the
place bugged to the ceiling all
around."</p>
<p>"Bugged? What with?" Shatrak
asked, and Erskyll was wanting to
know what he meant. No doubt he
thought Ravney was talking about
things crawling out of the woodwork.</p>
<p>"Screen pickups, radio pickups,
wired microphones; you name it and
it's there. I'll bet every slave in the
Citadel knows everything that happens
in there while it's happening."</p>
<p>Shatrak wanted to know if he had
done anything about them. Ravney
shook his head.</p>
<p>"If that's how they want to run a
government, that's how they have a
right to run it. Commander Douvrin
put in a few of our own, a little better
camouflaged than theirs."</p>
<p>There were more troops on the
third stage down. They formed a
procession down a long empty hallway,
a few scared-looking slaves
peeping from doorways at them.
There were more troops where the
corridor ended in great double doors,
emblazoned with a straight broad-sword
diagonally across an eight-pointed
star. Emblematology of planets
conquered by the Space Vikings
always included swords and stars. An
officer gave a signal; the doors started
to slide apart, and within, from a
screen-speaker, came a fanfare of
trumpets.</p>
<p>At first, all he could see was the
projection-screen, far ahead, and the
<ins class="corr" title="Original reads 'tessallated'">tessellated</ins> aisle stretching toward it.
The trumpets stopped, and they advanced,
and then he saw the Lords-Master.</p>
<p>They were massed, standing among
benches on either side, and if anything
Pyairr Ravney had understated
their numbers. They all wore black,
trimmed with gold; he wondered if
the coincidence that these were also
the Imperial colors might be useful.
Queer garments, tightly fitted tunics
at the top which became flowing
robes below the waist, deeply scalloped
at the edges. The sleeves were
exaggeratedly wide; a knife or a pistol,
and not necessarily a small one,
could be concealed in every one. He
was sure that thought had entered
Vann Shatrak's mind. They were
armed, not with dress-daggers, but
with swords; long, straight cross-hilted
broadswords. They were the first
actual swords he had ever seen, except
in museums or on the stage.</p>
<p>There was a bench of gold and
onyx at the front, where, normally
the seven-man Presidium sat, and in
front of it were thronelike seats for
the Chiefs of Managements, equivalent
to the Imperial Council of Ministers.
Because of the projection
screen that had been installed, they
had all been moved to an improvised
dais on the left. There was another
dais on the right, under a canopy of
black and gold velvet, emblazoned
with the gold sun and superimposed
black cogwheel of the Empire. There
were three thrones, for himself, Shatrak,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81"></SPAN></span>
and Erskyll, and a number of
lesser but still imposing chairs for
their staffs.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>They took their seats. He slipped
the earplug of his memophone into
his left ear and pressed the stud in
the middle of his Grand Star of the
Order of Odin. The memophone began
giving him the names of the
Presidium and of the Chiefs of Managements.
He wondered how many
upper-slaves had been gunbutted to
produce them.</p>
<p>"Lords and Gentlemen," he said,
after he had greeted them and introduced
himself and the others, "I speak
to you in the name of his Imperial
Majesty, Rodrik III. His Majesty will
now greet you in his own voice, by
recording."</p>
<p>He pressed a button on the arm of
his chair. The screen lighted, flickered,
and steadied, and the trumpets
blared again. When the fanfare ended,
a voice thundered:</p>
<p>"<i>The Emperor speaks!</i>"</p>
<p>Rodrik III compromised on the
beard question with a small mustache.
He wore the stern but kindly
expression the best theatrical directors
in Asgard had taught him; Public
Face Number Three. He inclined
his head slightly and stiffly, as a man
wearing a seven-pound crown must.</p>
<p>"We greet our subjects of Aditya to
the fellowship of the Empire. We
have long had good reports of you,
and we are happy now to speak to
you. Deserve well of us, and prosper
under the Sun and Cogwheel."</p>
<p>Another fanfare, as the image vanished.
Before any of the Lords-Master
could find voice, he was speaking to
them:</p>
<p>"Well, Lords and Gentlemen, you
have been welcomed into the Empire
by his Majesty. I know, there hasn't
been a ship in or out of this system
for five centuries, and I suppose you
have a great many questions to ask
about the Galactic Empire. Members
of the Presidium and Chiefs of Managements
may address me directly;
others will please address the chairman."</p>
<p>Olvir Nikkolon, the owner of
Tchall Hozhet, was on his feet at
once. He had a loose-lipped mouth
and a not entirely straight nose and
pale eyes that were never entirely
still.</p>
<p>"What I want to know is; why did
you people have to come here to
take our planet away from us? Isn't
the rest of the Galaxy big enough for
you?"</p>
<p>"No, Lord Nikkolon. The Galaxy
is not big enough for any competition
of sovereignty. There must be one
and only one completely sovereign
power. The Terran Federation was
once such a power. It failed, and
vanished; you know what followed.
Darkness and anarchy. We are clawing
our way up out of that darkness.
We will not fail. We will create a
peaceful and unified Galaxy."</p>
<p>He talked to them, about the collapse
of the old Federation, about the
interstellar wars, about the Neobarbarians,
about the long night. He
told them how the Empire had risen
on a few planets five thousand light-years<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82"></SPAN></span>
away, and how it had spread.</p>
<p>"We will not repeat the mistakes
of the Terran Federation. We will not
attempt to force every planetary government
into a common pattern, or
dictate the ways in which they govern
themselves. We will foster in
every way peaceful trade and communication.
But we will not again
permit the plague of competing sovereignties,
the condition under which
war is inevitable. The first attempt to
set up such a sovereignty in competition
with the Empire will be crushed
mercilessly, and no planet inhabited
by any sapient race will be permitted
to remain outside the Empire.</p>
<p>"Lords and Gentlemen, permit me
to show you a little of what we have
already accomplished, in the past
three hundred years."</p>
<p>He pressed another button. The
screen flickered, and the show started.
It lasted for almost two hours; he
used a handphone to interject comments
and explanations. He showed
them planet after planet—Marduk,
where the Empire had begun, Baldur,
Vishnu, Belphegor, Morglay, whence
their ancestors had come, Amaterasu,
Irminsul, Fafnir, finally Odin, the
Imperial Planet. He showed towering
cities swarming with aircars; spaceports
where the huge globes of interstellar
ships landed and lifted out;
farms and industries; vast crowds at
public celebrations; troop-reviews
and naval bases and fleet-maneuvers;
historical views of the battles that had
created Imperial power.</p>
<p>"That, Lords and Gentlemen, is
what you have an opportunity to
bring your planet into. If you accept,
you will continue to rule Aditya under
the Empire. If you refuse, you
will only put us to the inconvenience
of replacing you with a new planetary
government, which will be annoying
for us and, probably, fatal for
you."</p>
<p>Nobody said anything for a few
minutes. Then Rovard Javasan, the
Chief of Administration and the owner
of the mountainous Khreggor
Chmidd, rose.</p>
<p>"Lords and Gentlemen, we cannot
resist anything like this," he said. "We
cannot even resist the force they have
here; that was tried yesterday, and
you all saw what happened. Now,
Prince Trevannion; just to what extent
will the Mastership retain its
sovereignty under the Empire?"</p>
<p>"To practically the same extent as
at present. You will, of course, acknowledge
the Emperor as your supreme
ruler, and will govern subject
to the Imperial Constitution. Have
you any colonies on any of the other
planets of this system?"</p>
<p>"We had a shipyard and docks on
the inner moon, and we had mines
on the fourth planet of this system,
but it is almost airless and the colony
was limited to a couple of dome-cities.
Both were abandoned years
ago."</p>
<p>"Both will be reopened before
long, I daresay. We'd better make the
limits of your sovereignty the orbit
of the outer planet of this system.
You may have your own normal-space
ships, but the Empire will control<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113"></SPAN></span>
all hyperdrive craft, and all nuclear
weapons. I take it you are the
sole government on this planet?
Then no other will be permitted to
compete with you."</p>
<div class="center"><div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-022.png" width-obs="500" height-obs="328" alt="" title="" /> </div>
</div>
<p>"Well, what are they taking away
from us, then?" somebody in the rear
asked.</p>
<p>"I assume that you are agreed to
accept the sovereignty of his Imperial
Majesty? Good. As a matter of
form, Lord Nikkolon, will you take a
vote? His Imperial Majesty would be
most gratified if it were unanimous."</p>
<p>Somebody insisted that the question
would have to be debated, which
meant that everybody would have to
make a speech, all two thousand of
them. He informed them that there
was nothing to debate; they were
confronted with an accomplished fact
which they must accept. So Nikkolon
made a speech, telling them at what
a great moment in Adityan history
they stood, and concluded by saying:</p>
<p>"I take it that it is the unanimous
will of this Convocation that the sovereignty
of the Galactic Emperor be
acknowledged, and that we, the 'Mastership
of Aditya' do here proclaim
our loyal allegiance to his Imperial
Majesty, Rodrik the Third. Any dissent?
Then it is ordered so recorded."</p>
<p>Then he had to make another
speech, to inform the representatives
of his new sovereign of the fact.
Prince Trevannion, in the name of
the Emperor, delivered the well-worn<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114"></SPAN></span>
words of welcome, and Lanze Degbrend
got the coronet out of the
black velvet bag under his arm and
the Imperial Proconsul, Obray, Count
Erskyll, was crowned. Erskyll's charge-d'affaires,
Sharll Ernanday, produced
the scroll of the Imperial Constitution,
and Erskyll began to read.</p>
<p>Section One: The universality of
the Empire. The absolute powers of
the Emperor. The rules of succession.
The Emperor also to be Planetary
King of Odin.</p>
<p>Section Two: Every planetary government
to be sovereign in its own
internal affairs.... Only one sovereign
government upon any planet,
or within normal-space travel distance....
All hyperspace ships, and
all nuclear weapons.... No planetary
government shall make war ...
enter into any alliance ... tax, regulate
or restrain interstellar trade or
communication.... Every sapient
being shall be equally protected....</p>
<p>Then he came to Article Six. He
cleared his throat, raised his voice,
and read:</p>
<p>"<i>There shall be no chattel-slavery
or serfdom anywhere in the Empire;
no sapient being, of any race whatsoever,
shall be the property of any being
but himself.</i>"</p>
<p>The Convocation Chamber was silent,
like a bomb with a defective
fuse, for all of thirty seconds. Then
it blew up with a roar. Out of the
corner of his eye, he saw the doors
slide apart and an airjeep, bristling
with machine guns, float in and rise
to the ceiling. The first inarticulate
roar was followed by a babel of voices,
like a tropical cloudburst on a
prefab hut. Olvir Nikkolon's mouth
was working as he shouted unheard.</p>
<p>He pressed another of the row of
buttons on the arm of his chair. Out of
the screen-speaker a voice, as loud, by
actual sound-meter test, as an anti-vehicle
gun, thundered:</p>
<p>"SILENCE!"</p>
<p>Into the shocked stillness which it
produced, he spoke, like a schoolmaster
who has returned to find his
room in an uproar:</p>
<p>"Lord Nikkolon; what is this nonsense?
You are Chairman of the Presidium;
is this how you keep order
here? What is this, a planetary parliament
or a spaceport saloon?"</p>
<p>"You tricked us!" Nikkolon accused.
"You didn't tell us about that
article when we voted. Why, our
whole society is based on slavery!"</p>
<p>Other voices joined in:</p>
<p>"That's all right for you people,
you have robots...."</p>
<p>"Maybe you don't know it, but
there are twenty million slaves on
this planet...."</p>
<p>"Look, you can't free slaves! That's
ridiculous. A slave's a <i>slave</i>!"</p>
<p>"Who'll do the work? And who
would they belong to? They'd have
to belong to somebody!"</p>
<p>"What I want to know," Rovard
Javasan made himself heard, is,
"<i>how</i> are you going to free them?"</p>
<p>There was an ancient word, originating
in one of the lost languages of
Pre-Atomic Terra—<i>sixtifor</i>. It meant,
the basic, fundamental, question. Rovard
Javasan, he suspected, had just
asked the sixtifor. Of course, Obray,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115"></SPAN></span>
Count Erskyll, Planetary Proconsul of
Aditya, didn't realize that. He didn't
even know what Javasan meant. Just
free them. Commodore Vann Shatrak
couldn't see much of a problem, either.
He would have answered, Just
free them, and then shoot down the
first two or three thousand who took it
seriously. Jurgen, Prince Trevannion,
had no intention whatever of attempting
to answer the sixtifor.</p>
<p>"My dear Lord Javasan, that is the
problem of the Adityan Mastership.
They are your slaves; we have neither
the intention nor the right to free
them. But let me remind you that
slavery is specifically prohibited by
the Imperial Constitution; if you do
not abolish it immediately, the Empire
will be forced to intervene. I believe,
toward the last of those audio-visuals,
you saw some examples of
Imperial intervention."</p>
<p>They had. A few looked apprehensively
at the ceiling, as though
expecting the hellburners and planet-busters
and nega-matter-bombs at any
moment. Then one of the members
among the benches rose.</p>
<p>"We don't know how we are going
to do it, Prince Trevannion," he said.
"We will do it, since this is the Empire
law, but you will have to tell us
how."</p>
<p>"Well, the first thing will have to
be an Act of Convocation, outlawing
the ownership of one being by another.
Set some definite date on
which the slaves must all be freed;
that need not be too immediate.
Then, I would suggest that you set
up some agency to handle all the details.
And, as soon as you have enacted
the abolition of slavery, which
should be this afternoon, appoint a
committee, say a dozen of you, to confer
with Count Erskyll and myself.
Say you have your committee aboard
the <i>Empress Eulalie</i> in six hours.
We'll have transportation arranged
by then. And let me point out, I
hope for the last time, that we discuss
matters directly, without intermediaries.
We don't want any more
slaves, pardon, freedmen, coming
aboard to talk for you, as happened
yesterday."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Obray, Count Erskyll, was unhappy
about it. He did not think that the
Lords-Master were to be trusted to
abolish slavery; he said so, on the
launch, returning to the ship. Jurgen,
Prince Trevannion was inclined to
agree. He doubted if any of the
Lords-Master he had seen were to be
trusted, unassisted, to fix a broken
mouse-trap.</p>
<p>Line-Commodore Vann Shatrak
was also worried. He was wondering
how long it would take for Pyairr
Ravney to make useful troops out of
the newly-surrendered slave soldiers,
and where he was going to find contragravity
to shift them expeditiously
from trouble-spot to trouble-spot. Erskyll
thought he was anticipating resistance
on the part of the Masters,
and for once he approved the use of
force. Ordinarily, force was a Bad
Thing, but this was a Good Cause,
which justified any means.</p>
<p>They entertained the committee
from the Convocation for dinner,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116"></SPAN></span>
that evening. They came aboard stiffly
hostile—most understandably so,
under the circumstances—and Prince
Trevannion exerted all his copious
charm to thaw them out, beginning
with the pre-dinner cocktails and
continuing through the meal. By the
time they retired for coffee and
brandy to the parlor where the conference
was to be held, the Lords-ex-Masters
were almost friendly.</p>
<p>"We've enacted the Emancipation
Act," Olvir Nikkolon, who was ex officio
chairman of the committee, reported.
"Every slave on the planet
must be free before the opening of
the next Midyear Feasts."</p>
<p>"And when will that be?"</p>
<p>Aditya, he knew, had a three hundred
and fifty-eight day year; even if
the Midyear Feasts were just past,
they were giving themselves very little
time. In about a hundred and fifty
days, Nikkolon said.</p>
<p>"Good heavens!" Erskyll began, indignantly.</p>
<p>"I should say so, myself," he put
in, cutting off anything else the new
Proconsul might have said. "You gentlemen
are allowing yourselves dangerously
little time. A hundred and
fifty days will pass quite rapidly, and
you have twenty million slaves to deal
with. If you start at this moment and
work continuously, you'll have a little
under a second apiece for each slave."</p>
<p>The Lords-Master looked dismayed.
So, he was happy to observe, did
Count Erskyll.</p>
<p>"I assume you have some system of
slave registration?" he continued.</p>
<p>That was safe. They had a bureaucracy,
and bureaucracies tend to have
registrations of practically everything.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, of course," Rovard Javasan
assured him. "That's your Management,
isn't it, Sesar; Servile Affairs?"</p>
<p>"Yes, we have complete data on
every slave on the planet," Sesar
Martwynn, the Chief of Servile Management,
said. "Of course, I'd have to
ask Zhorzh about the details...."</p>
<p>Zhorzh was Zhorzh Khouzhik,
Martwynn's chief-slave in office.</p>
<p>"At least, he was my chief-slave;
now you people have taken him away
from me. I don't know what I'm going
to do without him. For that matter,
I don't know what poor Zhorzh
will do, either."</p>
<p>"Have you gentlemen informed
your chief-slaves that they are free,
yet?"</p>
<p>Nikkolon and Javasan looked at
each other. Sesar Martwynn laughed.</p>
<p>"They know," Javasan said. "I must
say they are much disturbed."</p>
<p>"Well, reassure them, as soon as
you're back at the Citadel," he told
them. "Tell them that while they are
now free, they need not leave you unless
they so desire; that you will provide
for them as before."</p>
<p>"You mean, we can keep our chief-slaves?"
somebody cried.</p>
<p>"Yes, of course—chief-freedmen,
you'll have to call them, now. You'll
have to pay them a salary...."</p>
<p>"You mean, give them money?"
Ranal Valdry, the Lord Provost-Marshal
demanded, incredulously. "Pay
our own slaves?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"You idiot," somebody told him,
"they aren't our slaves any more.
That's the whole point of this discussion."</p>
<p>"But ... but how can we pay
slaves?" one of the committeemen-at-large
asked. "Freedmen, I mean?"</p>
<p>"With money. You do have money,
haven't you?"</p>
<p>"Of course we have. What do you
think we are, savages?"</p>
<p>"What kind of money?"</p>
<p>Why, money; what did he think?
The unit was the star-piece, the stelly.
When he asked to see some of it,
they were indignant. Nobody carried
money; wasn't Masterly. A Master
never even touched the stuff; that
was what slaves were for. He wanted
to know how it was secured, and they
didn't know what he meant, and
when he tried to explain their incomprehension
deepened. It seemed that
the Mastership issued money to finance
itself, and individual Masters
issued money on their personal credit,
and it was handled through the
Mastership Banks.</p>
<p>"That's Fedrig Daffysan's Management;
he isn't here," Rovard Javasan
said. "I can't explain it, myself."</p>
<p>And without his chief-slave, Fedrig
Daffysan probably would not be
able to, either.</p>
<p>"Yes, gentlemen. I understand.
You have money. Now, the first thing
you will have to do is furnish us with
a complete list of all the slave-owners
on the planet, and a list of all the
slaves held by each. This will be sent
back to Odin, and will be the basis
for the compensation to be paid for
the destruction of your property-rights
in these slaves. How much is
a slave worth, by the way?"</p>
<p>Nobody knew. Slaves were never
sold; it wasn't Masterly to sell one's
slaves. It wasn't even heard of.</p>
<p>"Well, we'll arrive at some valuation.
Now, as soon as you get back to
the Citadel, talk at once to your former
chief-slaves, and their immediate
subordinates, and explain the situation
to them. This can be passed
down through administrative freedmen
to the workers; you must see to
it that it is clearly understood, at all
levels, that as long as the freedmen
remain at their work they will be provided
for and paid, but that if they
quit your service they will receive
nothing. Do you think you can do
that?"</p>
<p>"You mean, give them everything
we've been giving them now, and
then pay them money?" Ranal Valdry
almost howled.</p>
<p>"Oh, no. You pay them a fixed
wage. You charge them for everything
you give them, and deduct that
from their wages. It will mean considerable
extra bookkeeping, but outside
of that I believe you'll find that
things will go along much as they
always did."</p>
<p>The Masters had begun to relax,
and by the time he was finished all
of them were smiling in relief. Count
Erskyll, on the other hand, was almost
writhing in his chair. It must be horrible
to be a brilliant young Proconsul
of liberal tendencies and to have
to sit mute while a cynical old Ministerial
Secretary, vastly one's superior<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118"></SPAN></span>
in the Imperial Establishment and a
distant cousin of the Emperor to
boot, calmly bartered away the sacred
liberties of twenty million people.</p>
<p>"But would that be legal, under
the Imperial Constitution?" Olvir
Nikkolon asked.</p>
<p>"I shouldn't have suggested it if it
hadn't been. The Constitution only
forbids physical ownership of one
sapient being by another; it emphatically
does not guarantee anyone an
unearned livelihood."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>The Convocation committee returned
to Zeggensburg to start preparing
the servile population for
freedom, or reasonable facsimile. The
chief-slaves would take care of that;
each one seemed to have a list of
other chief-slaves, and the word
would spread from them on an each-one-call-five
system. The public announcement
would be postponed until
the word could be passed out to
the upper servile levels. A meeting
with the chief-slaves in office of the
various Managements was scheduled
for the next afternoon.</p>
<p>Count Erskyll chatted with forced
affability while the departing committeemen
were being seen to the
launch that would take them down.
When the airlock closed behind them,
he drew Prince Trevannion aside out
of earshot of their subordinates.</p>
<p>"You know what you're doing?"
he raged, in a hoarse whisper. "You're
simply substituting peonage for outright
slavery!"</p>
<p>"I'd call that something of a step."
He motioned Erskyll into one of the
small hall-cars, climbed in beside
him, and lifted it, starting toward the
living-area. "The Convocation has
acknowledged the principle that sapient
beings should not be property.
That's a great deal, for one day."</p>
<p>"But the people will remain in
servitude, you know that. The Masters
will keep them in debt, and they'll
be treated just as brutally...."</p>
<p>"Oh, there will be abuses; that's to
be expected. This Freedmen's Management,
nee Servile Management,
will have to take care of that. Better
make a memo to talk with this chief-freedman
of Martwynn's, what's his
name? Zhorzh Khouzhik; that's right,
let Zhorzh do it. Employment Practices Code,
investigation agency, enforcement.
If he can't do the job,
that's not our fault. The Empire does
not guarantee every planet an honest,
intelligent and efficient government;
just a single one."</p>
<p>"But...."</p>
<p>"It will take two or three generations.
At first, the freedmen will be
exploited just as they always have
been, but in time there will be protests,
and disorders, and each time,
there will be some small improvement.
A society must evolve, Obray.
Let these people earn their freedom.
Then they will be worthy of it."</p>
<p>"They should have their freedom
now."</p>
<p>"This present generation? What
do you think freedom means to
them? <i>We don't have to work, any
more.</i> So down tools and let everything
stop at once. <i>We can do anything
we want to.</i> Let's kill the overseer.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119"></SPAN></span>
And: <i>Anything that belongs to
the Masters belongs to us; we're
Masters too, now.</i> No, I think it's better,
for the present, to tell them that
this freedom business is just a lot of
Masterly funny-talk, and that things
aren't really being changed at all. It
will effect a considerable saving of
his Imperial Majesty's ammunition,
for one thing."</p>
<p>He dropped Erskyll at his apartment
and sent the hall-car back from
his own. Lanze Degbrend was waiting
for him when he entered.</p>
<p>"Ravney's having trouble. That is
the word he used," Degbrend said.
In Pyairr Ravney's lexicon, trouble
meant shooting. "The news of the
Emancipation Act is leaking all over
the place. Some of the troops in the
north who haven't been disarmed yet
are mutinying, and there are slave
insurrections in a number of places."</p>
<p>"They think the Masters have forsaken
them, and it's every slave for
himself." He hadn't expected that to
start so soon. "The announcement had
better go out as quickly as possible.
And I think we're going to have
some trouble. You have information-taps
into Count Erskyll's numerous
staff? Use them as much as you can."</p>
<p>"You think he's going to try to
sabotage this employment programme
of yours, sir?"</p>
<p>"Oh, he won't think of it in those
terms. He'll be preventing me from
sabotaging the Emancipation. He
doesn't want to wait three generations;
he wants to free them at once.
Everything has to be at once for six-month-old
puppies, six-year-old children,
and reformers of any age."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>The <ins class="corr" title="Original reads 'announcemnet'">announcement</ins> did not go out
until nearly noon the next day. In
terms comprehensible to any low-grade
submoron, it was emphasized
that all this meant was that slaves
should henceforth be called freedmen,
that they could have money just
like Lords-Master, and that if they
worked faithfully and obeyed orders
they would be given everything they
were now receiving. Ravney had been
shuttling troops about, dealing with
the sporadic outbreaks of disorder
here and there: many of these had
been put down, and the rest died out
after the telecast explaining the situation.</p>
<p>In addition, some of Commander
Douvrin's intelligence people had
discovered that the only source of
fissionables and radioactives for the
planet was a complex of uranite
mines, separation plants, refineries
and reaction-plants on the smaller of
Aditya's two continents, Austragonia.
In spite of other urgent calls on his
resources, Ravney landed troops to
seize these, and a party of engineers
followed them down from the <i>Empress
Eulalie</i> to make an inspection.</p>
<p>At lunch, Count Erskyll was slightly
less <ins class="corr" title="Original reads 'intransigeant'">intransigent</ins> on the subject
of the wage-employment proposals.
No doubt some of his advisors had
been telling him what would happen
if any appreciable number of Aditya's
labor-force stopped work suddenly,
and the wave of uprisings that had
broken out before any public announcement
had been made puzzled<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></SPAN></span>
him. He was also concerned about
finding a suitable building for a proconsular
palace; the business of the
Empire on Aditya could not be conducted
long from shipboard.</p>
<p>Going down to the Citadel that
afternoon, they found the chief-freedmen
of the non-functional Chiefs of
Management assembled in a large
room on the fifth level down. There
was a cluster of big tables and communication-screens
and wired telephones
in the middle, with smaller
tables around them, at which freedmen
in variously colored gowns sat.
The ones at the central tables, a dozen
and a half, all wore chief-slaves'
white gowns.</p>
<p>Trevannion and Erskyll and Patrique
Morvill and Lanze Degbrend
joined these; subordinates guided the
rest of the party—a couple of Ravney's
officers and Erskyll's numerous
staff of advisors and specialists—to
distribute themselves with their opposite
numbers in the Mastership.
Everybody on the Adityan side
seemed uneasy with these strange
hermaphrodite creatures who were
neither slaves nor Lords-Master.</p>
<p>"Well, gentlemen," Count Erskyll
began, "I suppose you have been informed
by your former Lords-Master
of how relations between them and
you will be in the future?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, Lord Proconsul," Khreggor
Chmidd replied happily. "Everything
will be just as before, except
that the Lords-Master will be called
Lords-Employer, and the slaves will
be called freedmen, and any time they
want to starve to death, they can
leave their Employers if they wish."</p>
<p>Count Erskyll frowned. That wasn't
just exactly what he had hoped
Emancipation would mean to these
people.</p>
<p>"Nobody seems to understand
about this money thing, though,"
Zhorzh Khouzhik, Sesar Martwynn's
chief-freedman said. "My Lord-Master—"
He slapped himself across the
mouth and said, "Lord-Employer!"
five times, rapidly. "My Lord-<i>Employer</i>
tried to explain it to me, but I
don't think he understands very
clearly, himself."</p>
<p>"None of them do."</p>
<p>The speaker was a small man with
pale eyes and a mouth like a rat-trap;
Yakoop Zhannar, chief-freedman
to Ranal Valdry, the Provost-Marshal.</p>
<p>"Its really your idea, Prince Trevannion,"
Erskyll said. "Perhaps you
can explain it."</p>
<p>"Oh, it's very simple. You see...."</p>
<p>At least, it had seemed simple
when he started. Labor was a commodity,
which the worker sold and
the employer purchased; a "fair
wage" was one which enabled both
to operate at a profit. Everybody knew
that—except here on Aditya. On
Aditya, a slave worked because he
was a slave, and a Master provided
for him because he was a Master, and
that was all there was to it. But now,
it seemed, there weren't any more
Masters, and there weren't any more
slaves.</p>
<p>"That's exactly it," he replied,
when somebody said as much. "So
now, if the slaves, I mean, freedmen,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></SPAN></span>
want to eat, they have to work to
earn money to buy food, and if the
Employers want work done, they
have to pay people to do it."</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-030.png" width-obs="225" height-obs="700" alt="" title="" /></div>
<p>"Then why go to all the trouble
about the money?" That was an elderly
chief-freedman, Mykhyl Eschkhaffar,
whose Lord-Employer, Oraze
Borztall, was Manager of Public
Works. "Before your ships came, the
slaves worked for the Masters, and the
Masters took care of the slaves, and
everybody was content. Why not
leave it like that?"</p>
<p>"Because the Galactic Emperor,
who is the Lord-Master of these people,
says that there must be no more
slaves. Don't ask me why," Tchall
Hozhet snapped at him. "I don't
know, either. But they are here with
ships and guns and soldiers; what
can we do?"</p>
<p>"That's very close to it," he admitted.
"But there is one thing you
haven't considered. A slave only gets
what his master gives him. But a free
worker for pay gets money which he
can spend for whatever he wants,
and he can save money, and if he
finds that he can make more money
working for somebody else, he can
quit his employer and get a better
job."</p>
<p>"We hadn't thought of that,"
Khreggor Chmidd said. "A slave,
even a chief-slave, was never allowed
to have money of his own, and if he
got hold of any, he couldn't spend it.
But now...." A glorious vista
seemed to open in front of him. "And
he can accumulate money. I don't
suppose a common worker could, but<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></SPAN></span>
an upper slave.... Especially a
chief-slave...." He slapped his
mouth, and said, "Freedman!" five
times.</p>
<p>"Yes, Khreggor." That was Ridgerd
Schferts (Fedrig Daffysan; Fiscal
Management). "I am sure we could
all make quite a lot of money, now
that we are freedmen."</p>
<p>Some of them were briefly puzzled;
gradually, comprehension
dawned. Obray, Count Erskyll, looked
distressed; he seemed to be hoping,
vainly, that they weren't thinking of
what he suspected they were.</p>
<p>"How about the Mastership freedmen?"
another asked. "We, here, will
be paid by our Lords-Mas- ...
Lords-Employer. But everybody from
the green robes down were provided
for by the Mastership. Who will pay
them, now?"</p>
<p>"Why, the Mastership, of course,"
Ridgerd Schferts said. "My Management—my
Lord-Employer's, I mean—will
issue the money to pay them."</p>
<p>"You may need a new printing-press,"
Lanze Degbrend said. "And
an awful lot of paper."</p>
<p>"This planet will need currency
acceptable in interstellar trade," Erskyll
said.</p>
<p>Everybody looked blankly at him.
He changed the subject:</p>
<p>"Mr. Chmidd, could you or Mr.
Hozhet tell me what kind of a constitution
the Mastership has?"</p>
<p>"You mean, like the paper you
read in the Convocation?" Hozhet
asked. "Oh, there is nothing at all like
that. The former Lords-Master simply
ruled."</p>
<p>No. They reigned. This servile
<i>tammanihal</i>—another ancient Terran
word, of uncertain origin—ruled.</p>
<p>"Well, how is the Mastership organized,
then?" Erskyll persisted.
"How did the Lord Nikkolon get to
be Chairman of the Presidium, and
the Lord Javasan to be Chief of Administration?"</p>
<p>That was very simple. The Convocation,
consisting of the heads of all
the Masterly families, actually small
clans, numbered about twenty-five
hundred. They elected the seven
members of the Presidium, who drew
lots for the Chairmanship. They
served for life. Vacancies were filled
by election on nomination of the
surviving members. The Presidium
appointed the Chiefs of Managements,
who also served for life.</p>
<p>At least, it had stability. It was
self-perpetuating.</p>
<p>"Does the Convocation make the
laws?" Erskyll asked.</p>
<p>Hozhet was perplexed. "<i>Make</i>
laws, Lord Proconsul? Oh, no. We
have laws."</p>
<p>There were planets, here and
there through the Empire, where an
attitude like that would have been
distinctly beneficial; planets with
elective parliaments, every member
of which felt himself obligated to get
as many laws enacted during his term
of office as possible.</p>
<p>"But this is dreadful; you <i>must</i>
have a constitution!" Obray of Erskyll
was shocked. "We will have to
get one drawn up and adopted."</p>
<p>"We don't know anything about
that at all," Khreggor Chmidd admitted.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></SPAN></span>
"This is something new. You
will have to help us."</p>
<p>"I certainly will, Mr. Chmidd. Suppose
you form a committee—yourself,
and Mr. Hozhet, and three or
four others; select them among yourselves—and
we can get together and
talk over what will be needed. And
another thing. We'll have to stop
calling this the Mastership. There are
no more Masters."</p>
<p>"The Employership?" Lanze Degbrend
dead-panned.</p>
<p>Erskyll looked at him angrily.
"This is something," he told the
chief-freedmen, "that should not belong
to the Employers alone. It
should belong to everybody. Let us
call it the Commonwealth. That
means something everybody owns in
common."</p>
<p>"Something everybody owns, nobody
owns," Mykhyl Eschkhaffar objected.</p>
<p>"Oh, no, Mykhyl; it will belong to
everybody," Khreggor Chmidd told
him earnestly. "But somebody will
have to take care of it for everybody.
That," he added complacently,
"will be you and me and the rest of
us here."</p>
<p>"I believe," Yakoop Zhannar said,
almost smiling, "that this freedom is
going to be a wonderful thing. For
us."</p>
<p>"I don't like it!" Mykhyl Eschkhaffar
said stubbornly. "Too many new
things, and too much changing names.
We have to call slaves freedmen; we
have to call Lords Master Lords-Employer;
we have to call the Management
of Servile Affairs the Management
for Freedmen. Now we have to
call the Mastership this new name,
Commonwealth. And all these new
things, for which we have no routine
procedures and no directives. I wish
these people had never heard of this
planet."</p>
<p>"That makes at least two of us," Patrique
Morvill said, <i>sotto voce</i>.</p>
<p>"Well, the planetary constitution
can wait just a bit," Prince Trevannion
suggested. "We have a great
many items on the agenda which
must be taken care of immediately.
For instance, there's this thing about
finding a proconsular palace...."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>A surprising amount of work had
been done at the small tables where
Erskyll's staff of political and economic
and technological experts had
been conferring with the subordinate
upper-freedmen. It began coming out
during the pre-dinner cocktails
aboard the <i>Empress Eulalie</i>, continued
through the meal, and was fully
detailed during the formal debriefing
session afterward.</p>
<p>Finding a suitable building for the
Proconsular Palace would present difficulties.
Real estate was not sold on
Aditya, any more than slaves were. It
was not only un-Masterly but illegal;
estates were all entailed and the inalienable
property of Masterly families.
What was wanted was one of the
isolated residential towers in Zeggensburg,
far enough from the Citadel
to avoid an appearance of too
close supervision. The last thing anybody
wanted was to establish the
Proconsul in the Citadel itself. The<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124"></SPAN></span>
Management of Business of the Mastership,
however, had promised to do
something about it. That would
mean, no doubt, that the <i>Empress
Eulalie</i> would be hanging over Zeggensburg,
serving as Proconsular Palace,
for the next year or so.</p>
<p>The Servile Management, rechristened
Freedmen's Management,
would undertake to safeguard the
rights of the newly emancipated
slaves. There would be an Employment
Code—Count Erskyll was invited
to draw that up—and a force of
investigators, and an enforcement
agency, under Zhorzh Khouzhik.</p>
<p>One of Commander Douvrin's
men, who had been at the Austragonia
nuclear-industries establishment,
was present and reported:</p>
<p>"Great Ghu, you ought to see that
place! They've people working in
places I wouldn't send an unshielded
robot, and the hospital there is bulging
with radiation-sickness cases. The
equipment must have been brought
here by the Space Vikings. What's
left of it is the damnedest mess of
goldbergery I ever saw. The whole
thing ought to be shut down and
completely rebuilt."</p>
<p>Erskyll wanted to know who owned
it. The Mastership, he was told.</p>
<p>"That's right," one of his economics
men agreed. "Management of Public
Works." That would be Mykhyl
Eschkhaffar, who had so bitterly objected
to the new nomenclature. "If
anybody needs fissionables for a power-reactor
or radioactives for nuclear-electric
conversion, his chief business
slave gets what's needed. Furthermore,
doesn't even have to sign for it."</p>
<p>"Don't they sell it for revenue?"</p>
<p>"Nifflheim, no! This government
doesn't need revenue. This government
supports itself by counterfeiting.
When the Mastership needs
money, they just have Ridgerd
Schferts print up another batch. Like
everybody else."</p>
<p>"Then the money simply isn't
worth anything!" Erskyll was horrified,
which was rapidly becoming his
normal state.</p>
<p>"Who cares about money, Obray,"
he said. "Didn't you hear them, last
evening? It's un-Masterly to bother
about things like money. Of course,
everybody owes everybody for everything,
but it's all in the family."</p>
<p>"Well, something will have to be
done about that!"</p>
<p>That was at least the tenth time
he had said that, this evening.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>It came practically as a thunderbolt
when Khreggor Chmidd screened
the ship the next afternoon to report
that a Proconsular Palace had been
found, and would be ready for occupancy
in a day or so. The chief-freedmen
of the Management of
Business of the Mastership and of the
Lord Chief Justiciar had found one,
the Elegry Palace, which had been
unoccupied except for what he described
as a small caretaking staff for
years, while two Masterly families
disputed inheritance rights and slave
lawyers quibbled endlessly before a
slave judge. The chief freedman of
the Lord Chief Justiciar had simply
summoned judge and lawyers into his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125"></SPAN></span>
office and ordered them to settle the
suit at once. The settlement had consisted
of paying both litigants the
full value of the building; this came
to fifty million stellies apiece. Arbitrarily,
the stelly was assigned a value
in Imperial crowns of a hundred for
one. A million crowns was about what
the building would be worth, with
contents, on Odin. It would be paid
for with a draft on the Imperial Exchequer.</p>
<p>"Well, you have some hard currency
on the planet, now," he told
Count Erskyll, while they were having a pre-dinner
drink together that
evening. "I hope it doesn't touch off
an inflation, if the term is permissible
when applied to Adityan currency."</p>
<p>Erskyll snapped his fingers. "Yes!
And there's the money we've been
spending for supplies. And when we
start compensation payments....
Excuse me for a moment."</p>
<p>He dashed off, his drink in his
hand. After a long interval, he was
back, carrying a fresh one he had
gotten from a bartending robot en
route.</p>
<p>"Well, that's taken care of," he
said. "My fiscal man's getting in
touch with Ridgerd Schferts; the
Elegry heirs will be paid in Adityan
stellies, and the Imperial crowns will
be held in the Commonwealth Bank,
or, better, banked in Asgard, to give
Aditya some off-planet credit. And
we'll do the same with our other expenditures,
and with the slave-compensation.
This is going to be wonderful;
this planet needs everything
in the way of industrial equipment;
this is how they're going to get it."</p>
<p>"But, Obray; the compensations are
owing to the individual Masters. They
should be paid in crowns. You know
as well as I do that this hundred-for-one
rate is purely a local fiction. On
the interstellar exchange, these stellies
have a crown value of precisely
zero-point-zero."</p>
<p>"You know what would happen if
these ci-devant Masters got hold of
Imperial crowns," Erskyll said.
"They'd only squander them back
again for useless imported luxuries.
This planet needs a complete modernization,
and this is the only way
the money to pay for it can be gotten."
He was gesturing excitedly with
the almost-full glass in his hand;
Prince Trevannion stepped back out
of the way of the splash he anticipated.
"I have no sympathy for these
ci-devant Masters. They own every
stick and stone and pinch of dust on
this planet, as it is. Is that fair?"</p>
<p>"Possibly not. But neither is what
you're proposing to do."</p>
<p>Obray, Count Erskyll, couldn't see
that. He was proposing to secure the
Greatest Good for the Greatest Number,
and to Nifflheim with any minorities
who happened to be in the
way.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>The Navy took over the Elegry
Palace the next morning, ran up the
Imperial Sun and Cogwheel flag, and
began transmitting views of its interior
up to the <i>Empress Eulalie</i>. It was
considerably smaller than the Imperial
Palace at Asgard on Odin, but
room for room the furnishings were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126"></SPAN></span>
rather more ornate and expensive.
By the next afternoon, the counter-espionage
team that had gone down
reported the Masterly living quarters
clear of pickups, microphones, and
other apparatus of servile snooping,
of which they had found many. The
<i>Canopus</i> was recalled from her station
over the northern end of the
continent and began sending down
the proconsulate furnishings stowed
aboard, including several hundred domestic
robots.</p>
<p>The skeleton caretaking staff
Chmidd had mentioned proved to
number five hundred.</p>
<p>"What are we going to do about
them?" Erskyll wanted to know.
"There's a limit to the upkeep allowance
for a proconsulate, and we
can't pay five hundred useless servants.
The chief-freedman, and about a
dozen assistants, and a few to operate
the robots, when we train them, but
five hundred...!"</p>
<p>"Let Zhorzh do it," Prince Trevannion
suggested. "Isn't that what this
Freedmen's Management is for; to
find employment for emancipated
slaves? Just emancipate them and
turn them over to Khouzhik."</p>
<p>Khouzhik promptly placed all of
them on the payroll of his Management.
Khouzhik was having his hands
full. He had all his top mathematical
experts, some of whom even understood
the use of the slide-rule, trying
to work up a scale of wages. Erskyll
loaned him a few of his staff. None of
the ideas any of them developed
proved workable. Khouzhik had also
organized a corps of investigators,
and he was beginning to annex the
private guard-companies of the Lords-ex-Master,
whom he was organizing
into a police force.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>The nuclear works on Austragonia
were closed down. Mykhyl Eschkhaffar
ordered a programme of rationing
and priorities to conserve the
stock of plutonium and radioactive
isotopes on hand, and he decided
that henceforth nuclear-energy materials
would be sold instead of furnished
freely. He simply found out
what the market quotations on Odin
were, translated that into stellies, and
adopted it. This was just a base price;
there would have to be bribes for
priority allocations, rakeoffs for the
under-freedmen, and graft for the
business-freedmen of the Lords-ex-Masters
who bought the stuff. The
latter were completely unconcerned;
none of them even knew about it.</p>
<p>The Convocation adjourned until
the next regular session, at the Midyear
Feasts, an eight-day intercalary
period which permitted dividing the
358-day Adityan year into ten months
of thirty-five days each. Count Erskyll
was satisfied to see them go. He
was working on a constitution for the
Commonwealth of Aditya, and was
making very little progress with it.</p>
<p>"It's one of these elaborate check-and-balance
things," Lanze Degbrend
reported. "To begin with, it was the
constitution of Aton, with an elective
president substituted for a hereditary
king. Of course, there are a lot of
added gadgets; Atonian Radical Democrat
stuff. Chmidd and Hozhet and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></SPAN></span>
the other chief-slaves don't like it,
either."</p>
<p>"Slap your mouth and say, 'Freedmen,'
five times."</p>
<p>"Nuts," his subordinate retorted
insubordinately. "I know a slave
when I see one. A slave is a slave,
with or without a gorget; if he doesn't
wear it around his neck, he has it
<ins class="corr" title="Original reads 'tattoed'">tattooed</ins> on his soul. It takes at least
three generations to rub it off."</p>
<p>"I could wish that Count Erskyll...."
he began. "What else is our
Proconsul doing?"</p>
<p>"Well, I'm afraid he's trying to set
up some kind of a scheme for the
complete nationalization of all
farms, factories, transport facilities,
and other means of production and
distribution," Degbrend said.</p>
<p>"He's not going to try to do that
himself, is he?" He was, he discovered,
speaking sharply, and modified
his tone. "He won't do it with Imperial
authority, or with Imperial
troops. Not as long as I'm here. And
when we go back to Odin, I'll see to it
that Vann Shatrak understands that."</p>
<p>"Oh, no. The Commonwealth of
Aditya will do that," Degbrend said.
"Chmidd and Hozhet and Yakoop
Zhannar and Zhorzh Khouzhik and
the rest of them, that is. He wants it
done legitimately and legally. That
means, he'll have to wait till the
Midyear Feasts, when the Convocation
assembles, and he can get his
constitution enacted. If he can get it
written by then."</p>
<p>Vann Shatrak sent two of the destroyers
off to explore the moons of
Aditya, of which there were two. The
outer moon, Aditya-<i>Ba'</i>, was an irregular
chunk of rock fifty miles in
diameter, barely visible to the naked
eye. The inner, Aditya-<i>Alif</i>, however,
was an eight-hundred-mile
sphere; it had once been the planetary
ship-station and shipyard-base.
It seemed to have been abandoned
when the Adityan technology and
economy had begun sagging under
the weight of the slave system. Most
of the installations remained, badly
run down but repairable. Shatrak
transferred as many of his technicians
as he could spare to the <i>Mizar</i>
and sent her to recondition the shipyard
and render the underground
city inhabitable again so that the
satellite could be used as a base for
his ships. He decided, then, to send
the <i>Irma</i> back to Odin with reports
of the annexation of Aditya, a proposal
that Aditya-<i>Alif</i> be made a
permanent Imperial naval-base, and
a request for more troops.</p>
<p>Prince Trevannion taped up his
own reports, describing the general
situation on the newly annexed planet,
and doing nothing to minimize
the problems facing its Proconsul.</p>
<p>"Count Erskyll" he finished, "is
doing the best possible under circumstances
from which I myself
would feel inclined to shrink. If not
carried to excess, perhaps youthful
idealism is not without value in Empire
statecraft. I understand that
Commodore Shatrak, who is also coping
with some very trying problems,
is requesting troop reenforcements.
I believe this request amply justified,
and would recommend that they be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></SPAN></span>
gotten here as speedily as possible.</p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-037.png" width-obs="223" height-obs="700" alt="" title="" /></div>
<p>"I understand that he is also recommending
a permanent naval base
on the larger of this planet's two
satellites. This I also endorse unreservedly.
It would have a most <ins class="corr" title="Original reads 'salutory'">salutary</ins>
effect on the local government.
I would further recommend that
Commodore Shatrak be placed in
command of it, with suitable promotion,
which he has long ago earned."</p>
<p>Erskyll was surprised that he was
not himself returning to Odin on the
destroyer, and evidently disturbed.
He mentioned it during pre-dinner
cocktails that evening.</p>
<p>"I know, my own work here is
finished; was the moment the Convocation
voted acknowledgment of
Imperial rule." Prince Trevannion
replied. "I would like to stay on for
the Midyear Feasts, though. The
Convocation will vote on your constitution,
and I would like to be able
to report their action to the Prime
Minister. How is it progressing, by
the way?"</p>
<p>"Well, we have a rough draft. I
don't care much for it, myself, but
Citizen Hozhet and Citizen Chmidd
and Citizen Zhannar and the others
are most enthusiastic, and, after all,
they are the ones who will have to
operate under it."</p>
<p>The Masterly estates would be the
representative units; from each, the
freedmen would elect representatives
to regional elective councils, and
these in turn would elect representatives
to a central electoral council
which would elect a Supreme People's
Legislative Council. This would<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></SPAN></span>
not only function as the legislative
body, but would also elect a Manager-in-Chief,
who would appoint
the Chiefs of Management, who, in
turn, would appoint their own subordinates.</p>
<p>"I don't like it, myself," Erskyll
said. "It's not democratic enough.
There should be a direct vote by the
people. Well," he grudged, "I suppose
it will take a little time for
them to learn democracy." This was
the first time he had come out and
admitted that. "There is to be a Constituent
Convention in five years, to
draw up a new constitution."</p>
<p>"How about the Convocation?
You don't expect them to vote themselves
out of existence, do you?"</p>
<p>"Oh, we're keeping the Convocation,
in the present constitution, but
they won't have any power. Five
years from now, we'll be rid of them
entirely. Look here; you're not going
to work against this, are you? You
won't advise these ci-devant Lords-Master
to vote against it, when it
comes up?"</p>
<p>"Certainly not. I think your constitution—Khreggor
Chmidd's and
Tchall Hozhet's, to be exact—will be
nothing short of a political disaster,
but it will insure some political stability,
which is all that matters from
the Imperial point of view. An Empire
statesman must always guard
against sympathizing with local factions
and interests, and I can think of
no planet on which I could be safer
from any such temptation. If these
Lords-Master want to vote their
throats cut, and the slaves want to
re-enslave themselves, they may all
do so with my complete blessing."</p>
<p>If he had been at all given to
dramatic gestures he would then
have sent for water and washed his
hands.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Metaphorically, he did so at that
moment; thereafter his interest in
Adityan affairs was that of a spectator
at a boring and stupid show,
watching only because there is nothing
else to watch, and wishing that
it had been possible to have returned
to Odin on the <i>Irma</i>. The Prime
Minister, however, was entitled to a
full and impartial report, which he
would scarcely get from Count Erskyll,
on this new jewel in the Imperial
Crown. To be able to furnish
that, he would have to remain until
the Midyear Feasts, when the Convocation
would act on the new constitution.
Whether the constitution was
adopted or rejected was, in itself,
unimportant; in either case, Aditya
would have a government recognizable
as such by the Empire, which
was already recognizing some fairly
unlikely-looking governments. In
either case, too, Aditya would make
nobody on any other planet any trouble.
It wouldn't have, at least for a
long time, even if it had been left
unannexed, but no planet inhabited
by Terro-humans could be trusted to
remain permanently peaceful and
isolated. There is a spark of aggressive
ambition in every Terro-human
people, no matter how debased,
which may smoulder for centuries or
even millennia and then burst,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130"></SPAN></span>
fanned by some random wind, into
flame. To shift the metaphor slightly,
the Empire could afford to leave no
unwatched pots around to boil over
unexpectedly.</p>
<p>Occasionally, he did warn young
Erskyll of the dangers of overwork
and emotional over-involvement.
Each time, the Proconsul would pour
out some tale of bickering and rivalry
among the chief-freedmen of the
Managements. Citizen Khouzhik and
Citizen Eschkhaffar—they were all
calling each other Citizen, now—were
contesting overlapping jurisdictions.
Khouzhik wanted to change
the name of his Management—he
no longer bothered mentioning Sesar
Martwynn—to Labor and Industry.
To this, Mykhyl Eschkhaffar objected
vehemently; any Industry that was
going to be managed would be managed
by his—Oraze Borztall was similarly
left unmentioned—management
of Public Works. And they
were also feuding about the robotic
and remote-controlled equipment
that had been sent down from the
<i>Empress Eulalie</i> to the Austragonia
nuclear-power works.</p>
<p>Khouzhik was also in controversy
with Yakoop Zhannar, who was already
calling himself People's Provost-Marshal.
Khouzhik had taken
over all the private armed-guards on
the Masterly farms and in the factories,
and assimilated them into something
he was calling the People's
Labor Police, ostensibly to enforce
the new Code of Employment Practice.
Zhannar insisted that they
should be under his Management;
when Chmidd and Hozhet supported
Khouzhik, he began clamoring for
the return of the regular army to his
control.</p>
<p>Commodore Shatrak was more
than glad to get rid of the Adityan
army, and so was Pyairr Ravney, who
was in immediate command of them.
The Adityans didn't care one way or
the other. Zhannar was delighted, and
so were Chmidd and Hozhet. So,
oddly, was Zhorzh Khouzhik. At the
same time, the state of martial law
proclaimed on the day of the landing
was terminated.</p>
<p>The days slipped by. There were
entertainments at the new Proconsular
Palace for the Masterly residents
of Zeggensburg, and Erskyll and his
staff were entertained at Masterly
palaces. The latter affairs pained
Prince Trevannion excessively—hours
on end of gorging uninspired
cooking and guzzling too-sweet wine
and watching ex-slave performers
whose acts were either brutal or obscene
and frequently both, and, more
unforgivable, stupidly so. The Masterly
conversation was simply stupid.</p>
<p>He borrowed a reconn-car from
Ravney; he and Lanze Degbrend
and, usually, one or another of Ravney's
young officers, took long trips
of exploration. They fished in mountain
streams, and hunted the small
deerlike game, and he found himself
enjoying these excursions more than
anything he had done in recent
years; certainly anything since Aditya
had come into the viewscreens of
the <i>Empress Eulalie</i>. Once in a while,
they claimed and received Masterly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131"></SPAN></span>
hospitality at some large farming estate.
They were always greeted with
fulsome cordiality, and there was always
surprise that persons of their
rank and consequence should travel
unaccompanied by a retinue of servants.</p>
<p>He found things the same wherever
he stopped. None of the farms
were producing more than a quarter
of the potential yield per acre, and
all depleting the soil outrageously.
Ten slaves—he didn't bother to
think of them as freedmen—doing
the work of one, and a hundred of
them taking all day to do what one
robot would have done before noon.
White-gowned chief-slaves lording it
over green and orange gowned supervisors
and clerks; overseers still
carrying and frequently using whips
and knouts and sandbag flails.</p>
<p>Once or twice, when a Masterly
back was turned, he caught a look of
murderous hatred flickering into the
eyes of some upper-slave. Once or
twice, when a Master thought his
was turned, he caught the same look
in Masterly eyes, directed at him or
at Lanze.</p>
<p>The Midyear Feasts approached;
each time he returned to the city he
found more excitement as preparations
went on. Mykhyl Eschkhaffar's
Management of Public Works
was giving top priority to redecorating
the Convocation Chamber and
the lounges and dining-rooms around
it in which the Masters would relax
during recesses. More and more
Masterly families flocked in from
outlying estates, with contragravity-flotillas
and retinues of attendants,
to be entertained at the city palaces.
There were more and gaudier banquets
and balls and entertainments.
By the time the Feasts began, every
Masterly man, woman and child
would be in the city.</p>
<p>There were long columns of military
contragravity coming in, too;
troop-carriers and combat-vehicles.
Yakoop Zhannar was bringing in all
his newly recovered army, and Zhorzh
Khouzhik his newly organized People's
Labor Police. Vann Shatrak,
who was now commanding his battle-line
unit by screen from the Proconsular
Palace, began fretting.</p>
<p>"I wish I hadn't been in such a
hurry to terminate martial rule," he
said, once. "And I wish Pyairr hadn't
been so confoundedly efficient in retraining
those troops. That may cost
us a few extra casualties, before we're
through."</p>
<p>Count Erskyll laughed at his worries.</p>
<p>"It's just this rivalry between Citizen
Khouzhik and Citizen Zhannar,"
he said, "They're like a couple of ci-devant
Lords-Master competing to
give more extravagant feasts. Zhannar's
going to hold a review of his
troops, and of course, Khouzhik intends
to hold a review of his police.
That's all there is to it."</p>
<p>"Well, just the same, I wish some
reenforcements would get here from
Odin," Shatrak said.</p>
<p>Erskyll was busy, in the days before
the Midyear Feasts, either conferring
at the Citadel with the ex-slaves
who were the functional heads<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132"></SPAN></span>
of the Managements or at the Proconsular
Palace with Hozhet and
Chmidd and the chief-freedmen of
the influential Convocation leaders
and Presidium members. Everybody
was extremely optimistic about the
constitution.</p>
<p>He couldn't quite understand the
optimism, himself.</p>
<p>"If I were one of these Lords-Master,
I wouldn't even consider the
thing," he told Erskyll. "I know,
they're stupid, but I can't believe
they're stupid enough to commit suicide,
and that's what this amounts
to."</p>
<p>"Yes, it does," Erskyll agreed,
cheerfully. "As soon as they enact it,
they'll be of no more consequence
than the Assemblage of Peers on
Aton; they'll have no voice in the
operation of the Commonwealth, and
none in the new constitution that will
be drawn up five years from now.
And that will be the end of them.
All the big estates, and the factories
and mines and contragravity-ship
lines will be nationalized."</p>
<p>"And they'll have nothing at all,
except a hamper-full of repudiated
paper stellies," he finished. "That's
what I mean. What makes you think
they'll be willing to vote for that?"</p>
<p>"They don't know they're voting
for it. They'll think they're voting to
keep control of the Mastership. People
like Olvir Nikkolon and Rovard
Javasan and Ranal Valdry and Sesar
Martwynn think they still own their
chief-freedmen; they think Hozhet
and Chmidd and Zhannar and Khouzhik
will do exactly what they tell
them. And they believe anything
the Hozhets and Chmidds and Zhannars
tell them. And every chief-freedman
is telling his Lord-Employer
that the only way they can
keep control is by adopting the constitution;
that they can control the
elections on their estates, and hand-pick
the People's Legislative Council.
I tell you, Prince Trevannion, the
<ins class="corr" title="Original reads 'constituion'">constitution</ins> is as good as enacted."</p>
<p>Two days before the opening of
the Convocation, the <i>Irma</i> came into
radio-range, five light-hours away,
and began transmitting in taped
matter at sixty-speed. Erskyll's report
and his own acknowledged; a routine
"well done" for the successful annexation.
Commendation for Shatrak's
handling of the landing operation.
Orders to take over Aditya-<i>Alif</i> and
begin construction of a permanent
naval base. Notification of promotion
to base-admiral, and blank commission
as line-commodore; that
would be Patrique Morvill. And advice
that one transport-cruiser, <i>Algol</i>,
with an Army contragravity brigade
aboard, and two engineering
ships, would leave Odin for Aditya
in fifteen days. The last two words
erased much of the new base-admiral's
pleasure.</p>
<p>"Fifteen days, great Ghu! And
those tubs won't make near the speed
of <i>Irma</i>, getting here. We'll be lucky
to see them in twenty. And Beelzebub
only knows what'll be going on
here then."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Four times, the big screen failed
to respond. They were all crowded<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133"></SPAN></span>
into one of the executive conference-rooms
at the Proconsular Palace, the
batteries of communication and recording
equipment incongruously
functional among the gold-encrusted
luxury of the original Masterly
furnishings. Shatrak swore.</p>
<p>"Andrey, I thought your people had
planted those pickups where they
couldn't be found," he said to Commander
Douvrin.</p>
<p>"There is no such place, sir," the
intelligence officer replied. "Just
places where things are hard to
find."</p>
<p>"Did you mention our pickups to
Chmidd or Hozhet or any of the rest
of the shaveheads?" Shatrak asked
Erskyll.</p>
<p>"No. I didn't even know where
they were. And it was the freedmen
who found them," Erskyll said. "I
don't know why they wouldn't want
us looking in."</p>
<p>Lanze Degbrend, at the screen,
twisted the dial again, and this time
the screen flickered and cleared, and
they were looking into the Convocation
Chamber from the extreme rear,
above the double doors. Far away, in
front, Olvir Nikkolon was rising behind
the gold and onyx bench, and
from the speaker the call bell tolled
slowly, and the buzz of over two
thousand whispering voices diminished.
Nikkolon began to speak:</p>
<p>"Seven and a half centuries ago,
our fathers went forth from Morglay
to plant upon this planet a new
banner...."</p>
<p>It was evidently a set speech, one
he had recited year after year, and
every Lord Chairman of the Presidium
before him. The splendid traditions.
The glories of the Masterly
race. The all-conquering Space Vikings.
The proud heritage of the
Sword-Worlds. Lanze was fiddling
with the control knobs, stepping up
magnification and focusing on the
speaker's head and shoulders. Then
everybody laughed; Nikkolon had a
small plug in one ear, with a fine
wire running down to vanish under
his collar. Degbrend brought back
the full view of the Convocation
Chamber.</p>
<p>Nikkolon went on and on. Vann
Shatrak summoned a robot to furnish
him with a cold beer and another
cigar. Erskyll was drumming an impatient
devil's tattoo with his fingernails
on the gold-encrusted table in
front of him. Lanze Degbrend began
interpolating sarcastic comments.
And finally, Pyairr Ravney, who came
from Lugaluru, reverted to the idiom
of his planet's favorite sport:</p>
<p>"Come on, come on; turn out the
bull! What's the matter, is the gate
stuck?"</p>
<p>If so, it came quickly unstuck, and
the bull emerged, pawing and snorting.</p>
<p>"This year, other conquerors have
come to Aditya, here to plant another
banner, the Sun and Cogwheel
of the Galactic Empire, and I blush
to say it, we are as helpless against
these conquerors as were the miserable
barbarians and their wretched
serfs whom our fathers conquered
seven hundred and sixty-two years
ago, whose descendants, until this<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134"></SPAN></span>
black day, had been our slaves."</p>
<p>He continued, his voice growing
more impassioned and more <ins class="corr" title="Original reads 'belligerant'">belligerent</ins>.
Count Erskyll fidgeted. This wasn't
the way the Chmidd-Hozhet Constitution
ought to be introduced.</p>
<p>"So, perforce, we accepted the sovereignty
of this alien Empire. We are
now the subjects of his Imperial
Majesty, Rodrik III. We must govern
Aditya subject to the Imperial Constitution."
(Groans, boos; catcalls, if
the Adityan equivalent of cats made
noises like that.) "At one stroke, this
Constitution has abolished our peculiar
institution, upon which is based
our entire social structure. This I
know. But this same Imperial Constitution
is a collapsium-strong
shielding; let me call your attention
to Article One, Section Two: <i>Every
Empire planet shall be self-governed
as to its own affairs, in the manner of
its own choice and without interference.</i>
Mark this well, for it is our
guarantee that this government, of
the Masters, by the Masters, and for
the Masters, shall not perish from
Aditya." (Prolonged cheering.)</p>
<p>"Now, these arrogant conquerors
have overstepped their own supreme
law. They have written for this Mastership
a constitution, designed for
the sole purpose of accomplishing
the liquidation of the Masterly class
and race. They have endeavored to
force this planetary constitution upon
us by threats of force, and by a
shameful attempt to pervert the fidelity
of our chief-slaves—I will not
insult these loyal servitors with this
disgusting new name, freedmen—so
that we might,
a second time, be tricked into
voting assent to our
own undoing. But in this, they have
failed. Our chief-slaves have warned
us of the trap concealed in this constitution
written by the Proconsul,
Count Erskyll. My faithful Tchall
Hozhet has shown me all the pitfalls
in this infamous document...."</p>
<p>Obray, Count Erskyll, was staring
in dismay at the screen. Then he began
cursing blasphemously, the first
time he had ever been heard to do so,
and, as he was at least nominally a
Pantheist, this meant blaspheming
the entire infinite universe.</p>
<p>"The rats! The dirty treacherous
rats! We came here to help them,
and look; they've betrayed us...!"
He lost his voice in a wheezing sob,
and then asked: "Why did they do
it? Do they want to go on being
slaves?"</p>
<p>Perhaps they did. It wasn't for
love of their Lords-Master; he was
sure of that. Even from the beginning,
they had found it impossible to
disguise their contempt....</p>
<p>Then he saw Olvir Nikkolon stop
short and thrust out his arm, pointing
directly below the pickup, and as
he watched, something green-gray, a
remote-control contragravity lorry,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135"></SPAN></span>
came floating into
the field of the
screen. One of
the vehicles that had
been sent down from the <i>Empress
Eulalie</i> for use at the uranium mines.
As it lifted and advanced toward
the center of the room, the other
Lords-Master were springing to their
feet.</p>
<div class="center"><div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-044.png" width-obs="474" height-obs="700" alt="" title="" /> </div>
</div>
<p>Vann Shatrak also sprang to his
feet, reaching the controls of the
screen and cutting the sound. He
was just in time to save them from
being, at least temporarily, deafened,
for no sooner had he silenced the
speaker than the lorry vanished in a
flash that filled the entire room.</p>
<p>When the dazzle left their eyes,
and the smoke and dust began to
clear, they saw the Convocation
Chamber in wreckage, showers of
plaster and bits of plastiboard still
falling from above. The gold and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136"></SPAN></span>
onyx bench was broken in a number
of places; the Chiefs of Management
in front of it, and the Presidium
above, had vanished. Among the
benches lay black-clad bodies, a few
still moving. Smoke rose from burning
clothing. Admiral Shatrak put on
the sound again; from the screen
came screams and cries of pain and
fright.</p>
<p>Then the doors on the two long
sides opened, and red-brown uniforms
appeared. The soldiers advanced
into the Chamber, unslinging
rifles and submachine guns. Unheeding
the still falling plaster, they
moved forward, firing as they came.
A few of them slung their firearms
and picked up Masterly dress swords,
using them to finish the wounded
among the benches. The screams
grew fewer, and then stopped.</p>
<p>Count Erskyll sat frozen, staring
white-faced and horror-sick into the
screen. Some of the others had begun
to recover and were babbling
excitedly. Vann Shatrak was at a
communication-screen, talking to
Commodore Patrique Morvill, aboard
the <i>Empress Eulalie</i>:</p>
<p>"All the Landing-Troops, and all
the crewmen you can spare and arm.
And every vehicle you have. This is
only the start of it; there'll be a general
massacre of Masters next. I don't
doubt it's started already."</p>
<p>At another screen, Pyairr Ravney
was saying, to the officer of the day
of the Palace Guard: "No, there's no
telling what they'll do next. Whatever
it is, be ready for it ten minutes
ago."</p>
<p>He stubbed out his cigarette and
rose, and as he did, Erskyll came out
of his daze and onto his feet.</p>
<p>"Commodore Shatrak! I mean,
Admiral," he corrected himself. "We
must re-impose martial rule. I wish
I'd never talked you into terminating
it. Look at that!" He pointed at the
screen; big dump-lorries were already
coming in the doors under the
pickup, with a mob of gowned civil-service
people crowding in under
them. They and the soldiers began
dragging bodies out from among the
seats to be loaded and hauled away.
"There's the planetary government,
murdered to the last man!"</p>
<p>"I'm afraid we can't do anything
like that," he said. "This seems to be
a simple transfer of power by <i>coup-d'etat</i>;
rather more extreme than
usual, but normal political practice
on this sort of planet. The Empire
has no right to interfere."</p>
<p>Erskyll turned on him indignantly.
"But it's mass murder!"</p>
<p>"It's an accomplished fact. Whoever
ordered this, Citizen Chmidd
and Citizen Hozhet and Citizen
Zhannar and the rest of your good
democratic citizens, are now the
planetary government of Aditya. As
long as they don't attack us, or repudiate
the sovereignty of the Emperor,
you'll have to recognize them
as such."</p>
<p>"A bloody-handed gang of murderers;
recognize them?"</p>
<p>"All governments have a little
blood here and there on their hands;
you've seen this by screen instead of
reading about it in a history book,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137"></SPAN></span>
but that shouldn't make any difference.
And you've said, yourself, that
the Masters would have to be eliminated.
You've told Chmidd and
Hozhet and the others that, repeatedly.
Of course, you meant legally, by
constitutional and democratic means,
but that seemed just a bit too tedious
to them. They had them all together
in one room, where they could be
eliminated easily, and ... Lanze;
see if you can get anything on the
Citadel telecast."</p>
<p>Degbrend put on another communication-screen
and fiddled for a
moment. What came on was a view,
from another angle, of the Convocation
Chamber. A voice was saying:</p>
<p>"... not one left alive. The People's
Labor Police, acting on orders
of People's Manager of Labor Zhorzh
Khouzhik and People's Provost-Marshal
Yakoop Zhannar, are now
eliminating the rest of the ci-devant
Masterly class, all of whom are here
in Zeggensburg. The people are directed
to cooperate; kill them all,
men, women and children. We must
allow none of these foul exploiters
of the people live to see today's sun
go down...."</p>
<p>"You mean, we sit here while
those animals butcher women and
children?" Shatrak demanded, looking
from the Proconsul to the Ministerial
Secretary. "Well, by Ghu, I
won't! If I have to face a court for
it, all well and good, but...."</p>
<p>"You won't, Admiral. I seem to
recall, some years ago, a Commodore
Hastings, who got a baronetcy for
stopping a pogrom on Anath...."</p>
<p>"And broadcast an announcement
that any of the Masterly class may
find asylum here at the Proconsular
Palace. They're political fugitives;
scores of precedents for that," Erskyll
added.</p>
<p>Shatrak was back at the screen to
the <i>Empress Eulalie</i>.</p>
<p>"Patrique, get a jam-beam focussed
on that telecast station at the Citadel;
get it off the air. Then broadcast on
the same wavelength; announce that
anybody claiming sanctuary at the
Proconsular Palace will be taken in
and protected. And start getting
troops down, and all the spacemen
you can spare."</p>
<p>At the same time, Ravney was
saying, into his own screen:</p>
<p>"Plan Four. Variation H-3; this is
a rescue operation. This is not, repeat,
underscore, <i>not</i> an intervention
in planetary government. You are to
protect members of the Masterly
class in danger from mob violence.
That's anybody with hair on his head.
Stay away from the Citadel; the ones
there are all dead. Start with the four
buildings closest to us, and get them
cleared out. If the shaveheads give
you any trouble, don't argue with
them, just shoot them...."</p>
<p>Erskyll, after his brief moment of
decisiveness, was staring at the screen
to the Convocation Chamber, where
bodies were still being heaved into
the lorries like black sacks of grain.
Lanze Degbrend summoned a robot,
had it pour a highball, and gave it to
the Proconsul.</p>
<p>"Go ahead, Count Erskyll; drink it
down. Medicinal," he was saying.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></SPAN></span>
"Believe me you certainly need it."</p>
<p>Erskyll gulped it down. "I think I
could use another, if you please," he
said, handing the glass back to
Lanze. "And a cigarette." After he
had tasted his second drink and
puffed on the cigarette, he said: "I
was so proud. I thought they were
learning democracy."</p>
<p>"We don't, any of us, have too
much to be proud about," Degbrend
told him. "They must have been
planning and preparing this for a
couple of months, and we never
caught a whisper of it."</p>
<p>That was correct. They had deluded
Erskyll into thinking that they
were going to let the Masters vote
themselves out of power and set up
a representative government. They
had deluded the Masters into believing
that they were in favor of the
<i>status quo</i>, and opposed to Erkyll's
democratization and socialization.
There must be only a few of them
in the conspiracy. Chmidd and Hozhet
and Zhannar and Khouzhik and
Schferts and the rest of the Citadel
chief-slave clique. Among them, they
controlled all the armed force. The
bickering and rivalries must have
been part of the camouflage. He
supposed that a few of the upper
army commanders had been in on it,
too.</p>
<p>A communication-screen began
making noises. Somebody flipped the
switch, and Khreggor Chmidd appeared
in it. Erskyll swore softly, and
went to face the screen-image of the
elephantine ex-slave of the ex-Lord
Master, the late Rovard Javasan.</p>
<p>"Citizen Proconsul; why is our
telecast station, which is vitally needed
to give information to the people,
jammed off the air, and why are you
broadcasting, on our wavelength, advice
to the criminals of the ci-devant
Masterly class to take refuge in your
Proconsular Palace from the just
vengeance of the outraged victims of
their century-long exploitation?" he
began. "This is a flagrant violation of
the Imperial Constitution; our Emperor
will not be pleased at this unjustified
intervention in the affairs,
and this interference with the planetary
authority, of the People's Commonwealth
of Aditya!"</p>
<p>Obray of Erskyll must have realized,
for the first time, that he was
still holding a highball glass in one
hand and a cigarette in the other. He
flung both of them away.</p>
<p>"If the Imperial troops we are
sending into the city to rescue
women and children in danger from
your hoodlums meet with the least
resistance, you won't be in a position
to find out what his Majesty thinks
about it, because Admiral Shatrak
will have you and your accomplices
shot in the Convocation Chamber,
where you massacred the legitimate
government of this planet," he
barked.</p>
<p>So the real Obray, Count Erskyll,
had at last emerged. All the liberalism
and socialism and egalitarianism,
all the Helping-Hand, Torch-of-Democracy,
idealism, was merely
a surface stucco applied at the university
during the last six years. For
twenty-four years before that, from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></SPAN></span>
the day of his birth, he had been
taught, by his parents, his nurse, his
governess, his tutors, what it meant
to be an Erskyll of Aton and a grandson
of Errol, Duke of Yorvoy. As he
watched Khreggor Chmidd in the
screen, he grew angrier, if possible.</p>
<p>"Do you know what you blood-thirsty
imbeciles have done?" he demanded.
"You have just murdered,
along with two thousand men, some
five billion crowns, the money needed
to finance all these fine modernization
and industrialization plans. Or
are you crazy enough to think that
the Empire is going to indemnify
you for being emancipated and pay
that money over to you?"</p>
<p>"But, Citizen Proconsul...."</p>
<p>"And don't call me Citizen Proconsul!
I am a noble of the Galactic
Empire, and on this pigpen of a
planet I represent his Imperial Majesty.
You will respect, and address,
me accordingly."</p>
<p>Khreggor Chmidd no longer wore
the gorget of servility, but, as Lanze
Degbrend had once remarked, it was
still tattooed on his soul. He gulped.</p>
<p>"Y-yes, Lord-Master Proconsul!"</p>
<p>They were together again in the
big conference-room, which Vann
Shatrak had been using, through the
day, as an extemporised Battle-Control.
They slumped wearily in chairs;
they smoked and drank coffee; they
anxiously looked from viewscreen to
viewscreen, wondering when, and
how soon, the trouble would break
out again. It was dark, outside, now.
Floodlights threw a white dazzle
from the top of the Proconsular Palace
and from the tops of the four
buildings around it that Imperial
troops had cleared and occupied, and
from contragravity vehicles above.
There was light and activity at the
Citadel, and in the Servile City to the
south-east; the rest of Zeggensburg
was dark and quiet.</p>
<p>"I don't think we'll have any more
trouble," Admiral Shatrak was saying.
"They won't be fools enough to
attack us here, and all the Masters
are dead, except for the ones we're
sheltering."</p>
<p>"How many did we save?" Count
Erskyll asked.</p>
<p>Eight hundred odd, Shatrak told
him. Erskyll caught his breath.</p>
<p>"So few! Why, there were almost
twelve thousand of them in the city
this morning."</p>
<p>"I'm surprised we saved so many,"
Lanze Degbrend said. He still wore
combat coveralls, and a pistol-belt
lay beside his chair. "Most of them
were killed in the first hour."</p>
<p>And that had been before the
landing-craft from the ships had gotten
down, and there had only been
seven hundred men and forty vehicles
available. He had gone out with
them, himself; it had been the first
time he had worn battle-dress and
helmet or carried a weapon except
for sport in almost thirty years. It
had been an ugly, bloody, business;
one he wanted to forget as speedily
as possible. There had been times,
after seeing the mutilated bodies of
Masterly women and children, when
he had been forced to remind himself
that he had come out to prevent, not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></SPAN></span>
to participate in, a massacre. Some of
Ravney's men hadn't even tried.
Atrocity has a horrible facility for
begetting atrocity.</p>
<p>"What'll we do with them?" Erskyll
asked. "We can't turn them
loose; they'd all be murdered in a
matter of hours, and in any case,
they'd have nowhere to go. The
Commonwealth,"—he pronounced
the name he had himself selected as
though it were an obscenity—"has
nationalized all the Masterly property."</p>
<p>That had been announced almost
as soon as the Citadel telecast-station
had been unjammed, and shortly
thereafter they had begun encountering
bodies of Yakoop Zhannar's
soldiers and Zhorzh Khouzhik's police
who had been sent out to stop
looting and vandalism and occupy
the Masterly palaces. There had been
considerable shooting in the Servile
City; evidently the ex-slaves had to
be convinced that they must not
pillage or destroy their places of employment.</p>
<p>"Evacuate them off-planet," Shatrak
said. "As soon as <i>Algol</i> gets here,
we'll load the lot of them onto <i>Mizar</i>
or <i>Canopus</i> and haul them somewhere.
Ghu only knows how they'll
live, but...."</p>
<p>"Oh, they won't be paupers, or
public charges, Admiral," he said.
"You know, there's an estimated five
billion crowns in slave-compensation,
and when I return to Odin I
shall represent most strongly that
these survivors be paid the whole
sum. But I shall emphatically not
recommend that they be resettled on
Odin. They won't be at all grateful
to us for today's business, and on
Odin they could easily stir up some
very adverse public sentiment."</p>
<p>"My resignation will answer any
criticism of the Establishment the
public may make," Erskyll began.</p>
<p>"Oh, rubbish; don't talk about resigning,
Obray. You made a few
mistakes here, though I can't think of
a better planet in the Galaxy on
which you could have made them.
But no matter what you did or did
not do, this would have happened
eventually."</p>
<p>"You really think so?" Obray,
Count Erskyll, was desperately anxious
to be assured of that. "Perhaps if
I hadn't been so insistent on this
constitution...."</p>
<p>"That wouldn't have made a particle
of difference. We all made this
inevitable simply by coming here.
Before we came, it would have been
impossible. No slave would have
been able even to imagine a society
without Lords-Master; you heard
Chmidd and Hozhet, the first day,
aboard the <i>Empress Eulalie</i>. A slave
had to have a Master; he simply
couldn't belong to nobody at all.
And until you started talking socialization,
nobody could have imagined
property without a Masterly property-owning
class. And a massacre
like this would have been impossible
to organize or execute. For one
thing, it required an elaborate conspiratorial
organization, and until we
emancipated them, no slave would
have dared trust any other slave;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141"></SPAN></span>
every one would have betrayed any
other to curry favor with his Lord-Master.
We taught them that they
didn't need Lords-Master, or Masterly
favor, any more. And we presented
them with a situation their established
routines didn't cover, and
forced them into doing some original
thinking, which must have hurt like
Nifflheim at first. And we retrained
the army and handed it over to Yakoop
Zhannar, and inspired Zhorzh
Khouzhik to organize the Labor Police,
and fundamentally, no government
is anything but armed force.
Really, Obray, I can't see that you
can be blamed for anything but
speeding up an inevitable process
slightly."</p>
<p>"You think they'll see it that way
at Asgard?"</p>
<p>"You mean the Prime Minister
and His Majesty? That will be the
way I shall present it to them. That
was another reason I wanted to stay
on here. I anticipated that you might
want a credible witness to what was
going to happen," he said. "Now,
you'll be here for not more than five
years before you're promoted elsewhere.
Nobody remains longer than
that on a first Proconsular appointment.
Just keep your eyes and ears
and, especially, your mind, open
while you are here. You will learn
many things undreamed-of by the
political-science faculty at the University
of Nefertiti."</p>
<p>"You said I made mistakes," Erskyll
mentioned, ready to start learning
immediately.</p>
<p>"Yes. I pointed one of them out to
you some time ago: emotional involvement
with local groups. You
began sympathizing with the servile
class here almost immediately. I
don't think either of us learned anything
about them that the other didn't,
yet I found them despicable, one
and all. Why did you think them
worthy of your sympathy?"</p>
<p>"Why, because...." For a moment,
that was as far as he could get.
His motivation had been thalamic
rather than cortical and he was having
trouble externalizing it verbally.
"They were <i>slaves</i>. They were being
exploited and oppressed...."</p>
<p>"And, of course, their exploiters
were a lot of heartless villains, so
that made the slaves good and virtuous
innocents. That was your real,
fundamental, mistake. You know,
Obray, the downtrodden and long-suffering
proletariat aren't at all good
or innocent or virtuous. They are
just incompetent; they lack the abilities
necessary for overt villainy. You
saw, this afternoon, what they were
capable of doing when they were
given an opportunity. You know,
it's quite all right to give the underdog
a hand, but only one hand. Keep
the other hand on your pistol—or
he'll try to eat the one you gave him!
As you may have noticed, today,
when underdogs get up, they tend to
turn out to be wolves."</p>
<p>"What do you think this Commonwealth
will develop into, under
Chmidd and Hozhet and Khouzhik
and the rest?" Lanze Degbrend asked,
to keep the lecture going.</p>
<p>"Oh, a slave-state, of course; look<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142"></SPAN></span>
who's running it, and whom it will
govern. Not the kind of a slave-state
we can do anything about," he hastened
to add. "The Commonwealth
will be very definite about recognizing
that sapient beings cannot be
property. But all the rest of the
property will belong to the Commonwealth.
Remember that remark
of Chmidd's: 'It will belong to everybody,
but somebody will have to take
care of it for everybody. That will be
you and me.'"</p>
<p>Erskyll frowned. "I remember that.
I didn't like it, at the time. It sounded...."</p>
<p>Out of character, for a good and
virtuous proletarian; almost Masterly,
in fact. He continued:</p>
<p>"The Commonwealth will be sole
employer as well as sole property-owner,
and anybody who wants to eat
will have to work for the Commonwealth
on the Commonwealth's
terms. Chmidd's and Hozhet's and
Khouzhik's, that is. If that isn't substitution
of peonage for chattel slavery,
I don't know what the word
peonage means. But you'll do nothing
to interfere. You will see to it
that Aditya stays in the empire and
adheres to the Constitution and
makes no trouble for anybody off-planet.
I fancy you won't find that
too difficult. They'll be good, as long
as you deny them the means to be
anything else. And make sure that
they continue to call you Lord-Master
Proconsul."</p>
<p>Lecturing, he found, was dry work.
He summoned a bartending robot:</p>
<p>"Ho, slave! Attend your Lord-Master!"</p>
<p>Then he had to use his ultraviolet
pencil-light to bring it to him, and
dial for the brandy-and-soda he
wanted. As long as that was necessary,
there really wasn't anything to
worry about. But some of these days,
they'd build robots that would anticipate
orders, and robots to operate
robots, and robots to supervise them,
and....</p>
<p>No. It wouldn't quite come to
that. A slave is a slave, but a robot
is only a robot. As long as they stuck
to robots, they were reasonably
safe.</p>
<hr />
<div class="bbox">
<h4>Transcriber's Notes & Errata</h4>
<p>The original page numbers from the magazine have been
retained.</p>
<p>The following typographical errors have been
corrected.</p>
<div class='center'>
<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
<tr style="font-weight: bold"><td align='left'>Page</td><td align='left'>Error</td><td align='left'>Correction</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>65</td><td align='left'>Terrohuman</td><td align='left'>Terro-human</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>71</td><td align='left'>present;</td><td align='left'>present,</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>80</td><td align='left'>tessallated</td><td align='left'>tessellated</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>119</td><td align='left'>announcemnet</td><td align='left'>announcement</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>119</td><td align='left'>intransigeant</td><td align='left'>intransigent</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>127</td><td align='left'>tattoed</td><td align='left'>tattooed</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>128</td><td align='left'>salutory</td><td align='left'>salutary</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>132</td><td align='left'>constituion</td><td align='left'>constitution</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>134</td><td align='left'>belligerant</td><td align='left'>belligerent</td></tr>
</table></div>
</div>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />